Friday, November 25, 2016

Michael LaMantia in the Annals of Internal Medicine

Congratulations to Associate Professor of Medicine Michael LaMantia, MD, MPH and his colleagues who recently published the results of a large randomized study of in-home occupational therapy for patients with Alzheimer's Disease.

Callahan CM, Boustani MA, Schmid AA, LaMantia MA, Austrom MG, Miller DK, et al. Targeting Functional Decline in Alzheimer Disease: A Randomized Trial. Ann Intern Med. [Epub ahead of print 22 November 2016] doi: 10.7326/M16-0830
Background: Alzheimer disease results in progressive functional decline, leading to loss of independence.
Objective: To determine whether collaborative care plus 2 years of home-based occupational therapy delays functional decline.
Design: Randomized, controlled clinical trial. (ClinicalTrial.gov: NCT01314950)
Setting: Urban public health system.
Patients: 180 community-dwelling participants with Alzheimer disease and their informal caregivers.
Intervention: All participants received collaborative care for dementia. Patients in the intervention group also received in-home occupational therapy delivered in 24 sessions over 2 years.
Measurements: The primary outcome measure was the Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study Group Activities of Daily Living Scale (ADCS ADL); performance-based measures included the Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB) and Short Portable Sarcopenia Measure (SPSM).
Results: At baseline, clinical characteristics did not differ significantly between groups; the mean Mini-Mental State Examination score for both groups was 19 (SD, 7). The intervention group received a median of 18 home visits from the study occupational therapists. In both groups, ADCS ADL scores declined over 24 months. At the primary end point of 24 months, ADCS ADL scores did not differ between groups (mean difference, 2.34 [95% CI, −5.27 to 9.96]). We also could not definitively demonstrate between-group differences in mean SPPB or SPSM values.
Limitation: The results of this trial are indeterminate and do not rule out potential clinically important effects of the intervention.
Conclusion:We could not definitively demonstrate whether the addition of 2 years of in-home occupational therapy to a collaborative care management model slowed the rate of functional decline among persons with Alzheimer disease. This trial underscores the burden undertaken by caregivers as they provide care for family members with Alzheimer disease and the difficulty in slowing functional decline.
Primary Funding Source: National Institute on Aging.

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