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Computerized Cognitive Remediation of Postviral Neurocognitive Dysfunction in Older Adults
The goal of this clinical trial is to determine if a neuroscience-based computerized cognitive remediation ("brain training") program can treat neurocognitive dysfunction (i.e., memory or thinking difficulties) that emerges in some older adults following a viral infection. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does computerized cognitive remediation improve cognitive performance and day-to-day functioning in older adults with postviral neurocognitive dysfunction? * Will treatment effects be maintained over time, leading to better long term cognitive outcomes? * Does the treatment lead to reductions in blood-based markers of inflammation as a potential mechanism of cognitive symptom improvement? * Can the treatment be optimized and refined based on feedback from participants to improve user (patient) experience? Researchers will compare the computerized cognitive remediation program to an active computer-based control condition (alternative computer activities) to see if the computerized cognitive remediation program works to treat postviral neurocognitive dysfunction. Participation takes approximately 43-48 hours over 7 months, with most activities (40-46 hours) completed within the first 7-8 weeks, including: * Initial intake visit: Eligibility confirmation (\~2-3 hours) * Computer activities: About 5 hours per week for \~6 weeks (total \~30 hours) completed on a computer tablet provided by the study and loaned to participants for use during the treatment phase * Weekly remote check-in meetings: \~30 minutes each during treatment * Blood draws: Two sessions (before and after treatment), \~20-30 minutes each * Three research visits: Pre-treatment, post-treatment, and 6-month follow-up (\~2-3 hours each, including assessments of cognitive, emotional, and daily functioning)
A significant minority of older adults display persistent cognitive impairments after the acute phase of a viral infection, referred to as Postviral Neurocognitive Dysfunction (PND). Underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood, though chronic neuroinflammation appears to reflect a key pathway. PND is debilitating, increases the risk for accelerated biological aging and dementia, and is associated with a substantial economic burden to society. Older adults are at heightened risk for PND given weakened immune systems, baseline age-related cognitive decline, and susceptibility to more severe acute viral illness. There is a critical lack of evidence-based treatments. The goal of this project is to determine the potential of a neuroplasticity-based computerized cognitive remediation (CCR) intervention for treating PND in older adults and probing underlying mechanisms. The proposed design is a randomized, two-arm, clinical trial pilot study. Older adults with PND (N = 75) will be assigned to a 6-week course of neuroplasticity-based CCR or an active, computer-based control condition. Specific aims are to: examine preliminary efficacy of CCR for improving cognitive performance and day-to-day functioning in older adults with PND (Aim 1); optimize and refine the CCR program for older adults with PND using iterative, data-driven, participatory design methodology (Aim 2); and determine if CCR reduces peripheral inflammation as a potential mechanism of clinical symptom relief (Exploratory Aim 3).
Age
60 - No limit years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
UConn Health
Farmington, Connecticut, United States
Start Date
January 21, 2026
Primary Completion Date
February 28, 2030
Completion Date
February 28, 2030
Last Updated
February 24, 2026
75
ESTIMATED participants
Computerized Cognitive Remediation
OTHER
Alternative Computer Activities
OTHER
Lead Sponsor
Cutter Lindbergh
Collaborators
Data Source & Attribution
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