Neuropsychological Management of Multiple Sclerosis: Benefits of a Computerised Semi-autonomous At-home Cognitive Rehabilitation Programme
SEPIA
1 other identifier
interventional
40
1 country
1
Brief Summary
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a central nervous system inflammatory disease that causes a chronic and progressive physical handicap. Though primarily considered as a motor disease, it may, in 40 to 65% of cases, cause cognitive function deficits, concerning mainly attention, information processing speed, executive functions and memory. The impairment of these various functions may significantly impair the patients' social, professional and family lives. As such, the presence of cognitive difficulties is more frequently associated with the onset of anxio-depressive psychiatric symptoms and with reduced quality of life to the extent that it can be estimated via psychometric scales, or by a more qualitative approach. Recent research has focused, not on demonstrating the existence of cognitive disorders in MS, but rather on attempting to reduce their daily impact through cognitive rehabilitation programmes. While encouraging, the available results are relatively discordant and further work is required to demonstrate the actual efficacy of such programmes applied to daily life and of their long-term effects. The main objective of this work is to evaluate, in patients suffering from MS and presenting with cognitive disorders and/or with complaints, the effect of an innovative computerised, semi-autonomous at-home cognitive rehabilitation programme, following care, on quality of life. The secondary objective is to estimate the improvement, or even stabilisation over time, of patients' cognitive performance and psycho-affective sphere. In this randomised trial, the investigators plan to include 40 patients suffering from the RR and SP forms of MS, distributed to two groups paired by age, gender and socio-cultural level, one of which will benefit from computerised management, along with at-home support from a psychologist, while the other receives only the support. This work is expected to provide two types of benefits. Firstly, to enable patients to better understand their cognitive function via daily management and as such to improve their quality of life and self-esteem. Secondly, to eventually allow more appropriate patient management by combining the quasi-systematic use of this programme with follow-up consultations with referring practitioners (neurologists, psychologists, etc.).
Trial Health
Trial Health Score
Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach
participants targeted
Target at P25-P50 for not_applicable
Started Oct 2017
Longer than P75 for not_applicable
1 active site
Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.
Trial Relationships
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Study Timeline
Key milestones and dates
Study Start
First participant enrolled
October 31, 2017
CompletedFirst Submitted
Initial submission to the registry
March 7, 2018
CompletedFirst Posted
Study publicly available on registry
March 20, 2018
CompletedPrimary Completion
Last participant's last visit for primary outcome
May 31, 2023
CompletedStudy Completion
Last participant's last visit for all outcomes
May 31, 2024
CompletedJuly 25, 2025
July 1, 2025
5.6 years
March 7, 2018
July 22, 2025
Conditions
Keywords
Outcome Measures
Primary Outcomes (2)
Efficacy of cognitive rehabilitation on quality of life at short term.
Quality of life will be assessed by measuring the change of the scores of MUSIQOL (MUltiple Sclerosis International Quality Of Life) questionnaire between baseline and short-term visits. Efficacy will be assessed by comparing theses scores between groups A and B.
10 weeks
Efficacy of cognitive rehabilitation on quality of life at long term.
Quality of life will be assessed by measuring the change of the scores of MUSIQOL (MUltiple Sclerosis International Quality Of Life) questionnaire between baseline and long-term visits. Efficacy will be assessed by comparing theses scores between groups A and B.
34 weeks
Secondary Outcomes (14)
Efficacy of cognitive rehabilitation on self-esteem at short term.
10 weeks
Efficacy of cognitive rehabilitation on self-esteem long term.
34 weeks
Efficacy of cognitive rehabilitation on depression at short term.
10 weeks
Efficacy of cognitive rehabilitation on depression at long term.
34 weeks
Efficacy of cognitive rehabilitation on cognition at short term.
10 weeks
- +9 more secondary outcomes
Study Arms (2)
Experimental Group
EXPERIMENTALPatients benefit cognitive rehabilitation
Standard Psychological care
SHAM COMPARATORPatients do not benefit cognitive rehabilitation
Interventions
At-site inclusion visit: assessment of patient's eligibility by cognitive complaint questionnaire and BCcogSEP, VAPS and multiple errands test conducted by neuropsychologist. At-site baseline visit: assessment of quality of life (MUSIQOL), self-esteem (SEI), depression (MADRS), anxiety (HAMA), BICAMS: SDMT, CVLT-II, BVMTR, metacognition (MCQ-30), fatigue (EMIF-SEP), subjective sleep quality (PSQI) conducted by a neuropsychologist. At-home neuropsychological management (9 weeks): The patient performs the program (PRESCO software) on his computer autonomously at home at a rate of 3 sessions per week. A neuropsychologist performs at-home visits and weekly phone meetings to train the patient to the software, to encourage him to do exercises and to answer any software use-related questions. At-site follow-up visits: short and long-term retest of assessments performed in inclusion visit.
At-site inclusion visit: assessment of patient's eligibility by cognitive complaint questionnaire and BCcogSEP, VAPS and multiple errands test conducted by neuropsychologist. At-site baseline visit: assessment of quality of life (MUSIQOL), self-esteem (SEI), depression (MADRS), anxiety (HAMA), BICAMS: SDMT, CVLT-II, BVMTR, metacognition (MCQ-30), fatigue (EMIF-SEP), subjective sleep quality (PSQI) conducted by a neuropsychologist. At-home neuropsychological management (9 weeks): A neuropsychologist performs at-home visits and weekly phone meetings consisting in discussion of the patient's cognitive disorders. At-site follow-up visits: short and long-term retest of assessments performed in inclusion visit.
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if:
- MS defined according to the McDonald criteria revised in 2010
- Men and women aged between 18 and 65 years
- RR and SP forms
- Duration of progression ≤ 25 years
- EDSS ≤ 5.5
- Lack of disease activity as defined by the new Lublin criteria (2013)
- Cognitive complaint and/or cognitive disorders according to the investigator's judgement
- Impaired cognitive performance at least 1.65 SD below normative data at one test of the BCcogSEP battery
- French native language
- Owner of a laptop computer with Internet access
- Signing of the informed consent
You may not qualify if:
- \- Other neurological, psychiatric or developmental diseases prior to the MS diagnosis
- Cranial trauma sequelae
- Chronic alcohol and/or drug consumption
- EDSS \> 6
- Relapse and/or treatment with corticosteroids within the past month
- Persons deprived of liberty, minors, adults under wardship
- Cognitive examination within the past 6 months (including in particular all or some of the tests proposed by this project)
- Presence of dementia according to DSM V criteria, or of cognitive disorders preventing the patient from undergoing cognitive tests or performing cognitive rehabilitation exercises
- Any visual or motor deficit preventing the patient from undergoing cognitive tests or performing cognitive rehabilitation exercises
Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.
Sponsors & Collaborators
Study Sites (1)
University Hospital of Caen
Caen, Calvados, 14000, France
MeSH Terms
Conditions
Interventions
Condition Hierarchy (Ancestors)
Intervention Hierarchy (Ancestors)
Study Officials
- PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
Gilles Defer, Pr
Neurology Department, Caen University Hospital
Study Design
- Study Type
- interventional
- Phase
- not applicable
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Masking
- NONE
- Purpose
- OTHER
- Intervention Model
- FACTORIAL
- Sponsor Type
- OTHER
- Responsible Party
- SPONSOR
Study Record Dates
First Submitted
March 7, 2018
First Posted
March 20, 2018
Study Start
October 31, 2017
Primary Completion
May 31, 2023
Study Completion
May 31, 2024
Last Updated
July 25, 2025
Record last verified: 2025-07