JULY 26, 2016
~~~I USE THE FREE SITE - IT IS YOUR DECISION WHETHER TO SUBSCRIBE OR NOT. APPARENTLY THE CLAIM IS QUESTIONABLE. By Margaret
Study wasn't powered to
detect dementia outcomes
TORONTO -- It's time to hit the
reset button on recent headlines about 'brain games' potentially reducing
dementia risk.
Many media reports missed the mark
on a study presented here at the Alzheimer's Association International
Conference that suggested a computer game focused on brain
processing speed may be able to diminish dementia risk 10 years down the road.
The New Yorker wrote that "no brain game ... had ever been shown in a
large, randomized trial to prevent dementia. That was the case until
today."
TIME says the
study provides "the strongest evidence yet for the power of
brain training to reduce the risk of dementia."
Surely the 'brain games' industry
is hopeful for some positive news after recent negative press. In 2014, about
70 researchers from Stanford and the Max Planck Institute signed on to
a letter saying there wasn't enough evidence that any of these games
worked. A year later, Lumosity paid
a federal fine of $2 million to settle false marketing claims.
Those companies will get no
redemption from these latest findings.
The data presented here come from
a secondary analysis of a trial that wasn't powered to look at dementia
outcomes. And results presented at the meeting haven't been through a rigorous
peer review process.
The ACTIVE study, which was
supported by the National Institute on Aging and the National Institute on
Nursing Research, reported its
10-year outcomes in 2014.
ACTIVE was indeed a huge trial,
randomizing 2,785 healthy adults ages 65 to 70 who didn't have cognitive
impairment to one of three cognitive training interventions or to an inactive
control.
Training programs targeted either
memory, reasoning, or processing speed, and participants attended 10 sessions
once a week for 5 weeks; though some could do more than that.
The study showed that early
improvements in memory wore off after 10 years – but effects on reasoning and
processing speed remained, with the latter being "remarkably strong,"
Jonathan
King, PhD, of the National Institute on Aging who was an author of
that study, told MedPage Today.
Speed of processing training
involves strengthening the "unified field of vision," or being able
to process at least two objects in one image, one of which is focal and the
other in the periphery. The goal is to be able to divide your attention between
the two.
It's like the world's most boring video
game," King said. "It can be difficult, and if you're the kind of
person who wants to get faster and better you'll pay attention, but it's not
enticing. There are no Pokemon running around."
The 10-year study didn't report
dementia outcomes, because, again, it wasn't powered to detect them.
But King and colleagues
retroactively developed a methodology to look at dementia risk over 5 years. In
2012, they reported in a secondary analysis that cognitive
training didn't affect rates of incident dementia.
King also noted that 5 years may
not have been long enough to capture conversion to dementia. So Jerri Edwards, PhD, of the
University of Southern Florida, who had been involved in previous work on the
ACTIVE study, applied a similar methodology to assess 10-year outcomes. (King
did not participate in this study.)
Edwards found that processing
speed was associated with a 33% reduced risk of developing dementia or
cognitive impairment over 10 years (HR 0.67, 95% CI 0.49 to 0.91, P=0.012).
King said
it's difficult to dismiss the data completely out of hand. Speed of processing
training "was the largest training effect, and it did last 10 years,"
he told MedPage Today.Although this latest analysis
compared 700 controls and 700 in the processing speed group, it was not
designed to be a dementia prevention trial in the first place.
"This
was a very creative secondary use of the data using techniques that most would
accept under the conditions," King said. "But in these intervention
trials, the devil is in the details, and we have to make sure there's no hidden
confounding influence that would be a threat to the validity of the
findings."
PRIMARY SOURCE:
http://www.medpagetoday.com/MeetingCoverage/AAIC/59316?xid=NL_breakingnews_2016-07-26&eun=g972365d0r
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