- Sano, Mary;
- Zhu, Carolyn W;
- Kaye, Jeffrey;
- Mundt, James C;
- Hayes, Tamara L;
- Ferris, Steven;
- Thomas, Ronald G;
- Sun, Chung‐Kai;
- Jiang, Yanxin;
- Donohue, Michael C;
- Schneider, Lon S;
- Egelko, Susan;
- Aisen, Paul S;
- Feldman, Howard H;
- Investigators, for the Alzheimer Disease Cooperative Study
Introduction
There is an unmet need for effective methods for conducting dementia prevention trials.Methods
Home-based assessment study compared feasibility and efficiency, ability to capture change over time using in-home instruments, and ability to predict cognitive conversion using predefined triggers in a randomized clinical trial in (1) mail-in questionnaire/live telephone interviews, (2) automated telephone/interactive voice recognition, and (3) internet-based computer Kiosk technologies. Primary endpoint was defined as cognitive conversion.Results
Analysis followed a modified intent-to-treat principle. Dropout rates were low and similar across technologies but participants in Kiosk were more likely to dropout earlier. Staff resources needed were higher in Kiosk. In-home instruments distinguished conversion and stable groups. Cognitively stable group showed improvement in cognitive measures. Triggering was associated with higher likelihood of conversion but statistically significant only in mail-in questionnaire/live telephone interviews.Discussion
Relatively low efficiency of internet-based assessment compared with testing by live-assessors has implications for internet-based recruitment and assessment efforts currently proposed for diverse populations.