N/A
N=977
Aging and Cognitive Health Evaluation in Elders (ACHIEVE)
Aging · Cognitive Decline
Bottom Line
View on ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03243422 ↗Enrolled (actual)
977
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Feb 2024
Primary outcome: Primary: Change in Global Cognitive Function — -0.202; -0.200 score on a scale — p=0.96
Study Design & Population
- Study type
- Interventional
- Phase
- N/A
- Interventions
- Successful aging health education intervention (Other); Hearing intervention (Other)
- Age
- Older Adult · 70+ yrs
- Sex
- All
- Sponsor
- Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
- Primary completion
- Nov 2022
Outcome Measures
| Outcome | Result | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| PRIMARY Change in Global Cognitive Function |
-0.202; -0.200 | 0.96 |
| SECONDARY Change in Cognition Memory Domain |
-0.054; 0.025 | 0.15 |
| SECONDARY Change in Cognition Executive Function Domain |
-0.248; -0.268 | 0.69 |
| SECONDARY Change in Cognition Language Domain |
-0.155; -0.138 | 0.70 |
| SECONDARY Number of Participants Who Developed Cognitive Impairment |
49; 45 | 0.59 |
Summary
The ACHIEVE study will be a randomized controlled trial nested within the infrastructure of the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study. We plan to enroll 850 70-84 year-old cognitively normal older adults with hearing loss, who will be randomized 1:1 to the hearing intervention (hearing needs assessment, fitting of hearing devices, education/counseling) or successful aging health education intervention (individual sessions with a health educator covering healthy aging topics). Post-baseline, participants will be followed semi-annually for 3 years.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- Age 70-84 years. Individuals aged 70-84 at the time of randomization are eligible for participation. This age range will allow recruitment of participants who are at risk for cognitive decline but who may also be expected to survive for the duration of the trial. This age range is estimated to allow for potential participation of 61% of participants currently enrolled in the ARIC study.
- Community-dwelling.
- Fluent English-speaker.
- Residency. Participants must plan to reside in the local area for the study duration.
- Audiometric hearing impairment. Participants must have adult-onset hearing impairment with a four-frequency pure tone average (0.5, 1, 2, 4 kHz) in the better-hearing ear of ≥ 30 decibels (dB) and <70 dB. This level of hearing impairment is the level at which individuals would be most likely to benefit from the use of conventional amplification devices such as hearing aids.
- Word Recognition in Quiet score ≥60% in the better ear. A word recognition in quiet score <60% suggests hearing impairment that is too severe to benefit from conventional amplification devices such as hearing aids.
- Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE) score ≥ 23 for individuals with high-school degree or less; Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE) score ≥ 25 for individuals with some college or more; Participants must be at risk for cognitive decline in the range quantified well by neurocognitive testing, and so must be free from more substantial cognitive impairment at baseline.
- Willingness to participate be randomized and adhere to the protocol. Participants must be willing and able to consent to participate in the study, be willing to be randomized to either the Hearing intervention or to the Successful Aging intervention, and be willing to commit to adhere to the study protocol for the duration of the trial (3 years of a randomly assigned intervention).
Exclusion Criteria
- Self-reported disability in ≥ 2 or more Activities of Daily Living (ADL).
- Any self-reported hearing aid use in the past year. Trial participants will be randomized to hearing intervention or successful aging intervention and, therefore, participants cannot be receiving treatment for their hearing loss already.
- ARIC participants only: Diagnosis of adjudicated dementia based on a previous ARIC visit or participant required a proxy to assist with completing informed consent and responding to questions at ARIC Visit 6 or 7.
- Vision impairment (worse than 20/63 on MNREAD Acuity Chart). Participants who cannot see (with correction) well enough to complete the neurocognitive assessment are excluded.
- Medical contraindication to use of hearing aids (e.g., draining ear). Because hearing aids will be the primary device used in the hearing intervention, participants with medical contraindications to hearing aid use are excluded.
- Permanent conductive hearing impairment as determined by a difference in air audiometry and bone audiometry ("air-bone gap") greater than 15 dB in 2 or more contiguous frequencies in both ears. Because the impact of a conductive (versus a sensorineural) hearing loss on cognitive functioning may potentially differ and programming for hearing aids differs for conductive hearing loss, participants with permanent conductive hearing loss are excluded from the trial. Participants with an air-bone gap due to fluid in the ears or other resolvable medical issue may be enrolled in the trial following successful medical resolution of the cause of the air-bone gap.
- Unwilling to wear hearing aids on a regular (i.e., daily or near daily) basis.
Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03243422). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.