| Literature DB >> 33087078 |
Clara E James1,2, Eckart Altenmüller3,4, Matthias Kliegel5,6, Tillmann H C Krüger4,7, Dimitri Van De Ville8,9, Florian Worschech3,4, Laura Abdili10, Daniel S Scholz3,4, Kristin Jünemann4,7, Alexandra Hering5,6, Frédéric Grouiller11, Christopher Sinke4,7, Damien Marie10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent data suggest that musical practice prevents age-related cognitive decline. But experimental evidence remains sparse and no concise information on the neurophysiological bases exists, although cognitive decline represents a major impediment to healthy aging. A challenge in the field of aging is developing training regimens that stimulate neuroplasticity and delay or reverse symptoms of cognitive and cerebral decline. To be successful, these regimens should be easily integrated in daily life and intrinsically motivating. This study combines for the first-time protocolled music practice in elderly with cutting-edge neuroimaging and behavioral approaches, comparing two types of musical education.Entities:
Keywords: Age-related cognitive decline; Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI); Executive functions; Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); Multivariate data-driven analyses; Music induced brain and behavioral plasticity; One-year music practice; Randomized controlled trial; Voxel based Morphometry (VBM); Working memory
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33087078 PMCID: PMC7576734 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-020-01761-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Behavioral Battery (psychometric tests) (measured at all 4 time points: t0: baseline; t1: 6 months; t2: 12 months & t3: 18 months)
| BASIC COGNITION | ||
| Processing speed & Attention | Digit-symbol | WAIS-IV, Wechsler, 2011 [ |
| Short term memory | Forward Digit Span | WAIS IV, Wechsler, 2011 |
| Backward Digit Span | WAIS IV, Wechsler, 2011 | |
| - Shifting | Number switch | Zuber et al., 2016 [ |
| Perceptual switch + Prospective Memory | Zuber et al., 2016 | |
| - Inhibition | GoDigit -NoGo | Enge et al., 2014 [ |
| Stop-Signal Task | Enge et al., 2014 | |
| Logical reasoning | Matrices test | WAIS IV, Wechsler, 2011 |
| Episodic memory | Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test | Bean, 2011 [ |
| Musical aptitude | GOLD MSI (melody, rhythm) Harmony test (“Pietri”) | Müllensiefen, 2014 [ Oechslin et al., 2013 [ |
| Speech-in-noise perception | International Matrix Test (Oldenburg) | Kollmeier et al., 2015 [ |
| Visuo-manual aptitude | Purdue Pegboard | Tiffin and Asher, 1948 [ |
| Scale playing on keyboard | Scale analysis | Jabusch et al., 2004 [ |
| WHOQOL-BREFa | Well-being | WHO, 2014b |
| Physical Activity Scale for Elderly | PASE (last two weeks activities) | Washburn, 1993 [ |
aWorld Health Organization Quality of Life-BREF (BREF for abbreviated)
bhttps://www.who.int/mental_health/media/en/76.pdf
MRIa measurements (measured at all 4 time points: t0: baseline; t1: 6 months; t2: 12 months & t3: 18 months)
| TYPE OF MRI MEASUREMENT / SCAN | Main technical details of the Siemens protocols |
|---|---|
| Grey matter volume assessment [ | MP2RAGEb; duration: 8.22 min; voxel size: 1 mm isotropic; 176 slices; FOVc: 256x240x176 mm; TRd/TEe: 5000/2.98 ms; TI1f/TI2g: 700/2500 ms; flip angle 1/2: 4/5 degrees |
Functional MRI Tonal working memory task [ | EPIh; duration: 20.00 min; voxel size: 2.5 mm isotropic; 54 slices; FOV: 210x210x135 mm; multiband accelerator factor: 3; TR/TE: 1350/31.6 ms |
Resting state functional MRI Allows to measure activity in the Default Mode Network (DMN) reflecting global functional connectivity of the brain [ | EPI; duration: 10.31 min; voxel size: 2.5 mm isotropic; 54 slices; FOV: 210x210x135 mm; multiband accelerator factor: 3; TR/TE: 1350/31.6 ms |
White matter assessment Allows to compute i.a. Fractional Anisotropy for evaluating white matter integrity reflecting structural connectivity [ | DTIi; duration 7.38 min; voxel size: 1.5 mm isotropic; 84 slices; FOV: 222x222x126 mm; multiband accelerator factor: 3; TR/TE: 5163/109.2 ms; b-values: 0/1500 s/mm2; 65 directions, anterior to posterior phase encoding direction followed by a reverse direction for distortion correction; b-values: 0/ s/mm2) |
| Blood perfusion assessment [ | ASLj; duration 6.10 min; voxel size: 2.5 × 2.5 × 3.0 mm; 36 slices; FOV: 220x220x129 mm; TR/TE: 3640/21.0 ms; flip angle: 90 degrees |
a MRI: Magnetic Resonance Imaging
b MP2RAGE: Magnetization-Prepared 2 Rapid Acquisition Gradient Echoes
c FOV: Field Of View
d TR: Time to Repetition
e TE: Time to Echo
f TI1: Inversion Time 1
g TI2; Inversion Time 2
h EPI: Echo Planar Imaging
i DTI: Diffusion Tensor Imaging
j ASL: Arterial Spin Labeling
Prescreening procedure in order to verify inclusion/exclusion criteria
| PRESCREENINGa | Action | Data collection |
|---|---|---|
| First contact | Telephone call; decision to proceed to Pre-screening Step 1 | Age – gender – musical history – general health – native language – retirement – MRI compatibility – overall availability – contact information |
| PRE-SCREENING STEP 1 | ||
| Demographic questionnaireb | Send/receive by post | In-house questionnaire, detailed information on |
| Food Frequency Questionnaire FFQe [ | Send/receive by post | Detailed information on food consumption (quality and quantity) over the last 4 weeks |
| Music questionnaires | Send/receive by post | Musical history (in-house questionnaire; GEMMI lab): amount and intensity of music listening and extracurricular music training: solfege/theory, instrumental training, choir singing, intracurricular music training in school Goldsmiths Musical Sophistication Index (GOLD MSI): self-report inventory and test battery for individual differences in musical sophistication (ability to engage with music) [ |
| Godin-Shephard leisure-time physical activity questionnaire [ | Send/receive by post | Adapted to cover different parts of life (2–25 y.o., last 5 years and last year) |
| In-house questionnaire on stressful life events | Send/receive by post | Self-report inventory on stressful events that may influence cognitive functioning, covering 6 time periods (12–25 y.o., 25–55 y.o, 55–64 y.o.; last 10 years, 5 years and year; GEMMI lab) |
| Geriatric Depression Scalef [ | Send/receive by post | Short version. Check for clinical depression |
| PRE-SCREENING STEP 2 | ||
First laboratory visit - Basic clinical finger snap audition test - Psychometric tests i. Right-handedness ii. COGTELh [ | Verify /complete questionnaires of Step 1 Pass 3 psychometric tests | Check for major hearing impairmentg Pass the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory (revised) to check for right handedness [ |
a Outliers (based on cut-off scores and or other exclusion criteria) for the tests of Pre-screening Step 1 & 2 are excluded from the study
b All questionnaires are written in French and German; their translation was thoroughly verified by two bilingual researchers
c Allows to compute the Body Mass Index (BMI), obese people are excluded (BMI > 30), as obesity impacts on brain (shrinkage) [133]
d Adapted to Switzerland, France and Germany
e Swiss Food Frequency Questionnaire, a semi-quantitative questionnaire existing in French and German, on 80 food items divided in 12 food groups
f Geriatric Depression Scale short version
g Refined information on hearing will be acquired during the Behavioral Battery, see Table 4 International Matrix Test
h The COGTEL is a test of global cognition applied by telephone or face-to-face (we applied face-to-face). This hybrid cognitive test, developed for older adults by the team of Prof. Matthias Kliegel, provides a global measure of cognition, based on several memory and executive function subtests
Documents: information & consent forms, agreements
| TYPE OF DOCUMENT | When | What | Action | Who |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Information on the study | During presentations; via flyers; “participant information form” (distributed or sent by post or mail) | Objectives of the study; Information on the inclusion/exclusion criteria; information on procedures and timelines; announcement of randomization within two different groups of music education; information on measurements and their frequency ( | Answer questions during presentations or by mail or telephone and during first lab visit | Research team |
| Declaration of informed consent | After inclusion in the study (following the 2 pre-screening steps see Table | Consent to voluntary participate to the study with the right to withdraw at any time; accept the use of data for scientific and educational purposes, with assurance that the data will remain anonymous; to yes/no accept blood sampling (NOT an exclusion criterion); who to inform in case of potential unexpected detection of anomalies. | Read & Sign | Participant & member research team |
| Trust agreement | Before the courses start | The participant declares aiming to perform homework at least 30 min per day, 5 times per week, not to miss more than maximum 8 courses (on 40 in total), and announce absences and holidays well in advance with reasons and not to engage in any supplementary musical education | Read & Sign | Participant & member research team |
| MRI safety questionnaire | Before MRI measurements | Questions assuring MRI compatibility | Read & Sign | Participant & MRI operator |
| Debriefing on the fMRI task | After MRI measurements | Answer questions on sound perception, comprehension of the task, rating of difficulty of different experimental conditions, used strategies to perform the task, remarks | Read, answer questions | Participant & member research team |
| Homework questionnaire | 3, 6, 9 & 12 months after the beginning of the music interventions | Time per day and per week spent on homework on average | Read and -sign | Participant |
Study procedure with timelines
| RECRUITEMENT & PRE-screening | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Months | Stage | What | Where | Action | Duration |
| MONTH 1–3 | Preparatory phase | Recruitment of participants (n = ~ 70 in GE; n = ~ 100 in HA, on a total of ~ 500 applications) according to exclusion/exclusion criteria Detailed preparation of Behavioral Battery (psychometric testing) & (f)MRI protocols | Local journals/ elderly journals/ flyers/presentations HEdS-GE2 & IMMM3 BBL5 / HMS6 | Announcements (press & flyers) Presentations1/1rst check by telephone Creation of E-prime4 programs; preparation of paper and pencil tests; Synchronization of protocols between MRI scanners in Geneva and Hannover | |
| Month 4 | Piloting of (f)MRI protocols ( | BBL / HEdS-GE / HMS / IMMM | Feasibility testing | ||
| Pre-screening Step 1 | See Table | At home | Send/receive (mail/post) | 60 min. | |
| Month 5–6 | Pre-screening Step 2 (N GE = 63, N HA = 92) | Check/completion of questionnaires of Step 1 Basic clinical audition test Psychometric tests i. Right-handedness ii. COGTEL | HEdS-GE/ IMMM | Come to HEdS-GE, IMMM 1x | 20 min. 2 min. 5 min. 15 min. |
| After inclusion in the study | |||||
| Month 7–10 | Recruitment and training of music teachers Preparing of music education materials | ||||
| t0/baseline | i. Behavioral Battery (psychometric testing) ii. (f)MRI measurements iii. Blood sampling (by registered nurse) | HEdS-GE / IMMM BBL / HMS HEdS-GE / IMMM | Come to HEdS-GE, IMMM 1x Come to BBL, HMS 1x Come to HEdS-GE, HMS 1x | 2.5 h7 1.5 h 10 min. | |
| Month 10–22 | Interventions | 12 months of 1 h weekly music courses & homework | HEdS-GE / IMMM At home | HEdS-GE / IMMM Practice daily at home | 1 h/week 5 × 30 min./week |
| MONTH 16 | t1/ after 6 months of intervention | i. Behavioral Battery (psychometric testing) ii. (f)MRI measurements iii. Blood sampling | HEdS-GE / IMMM BBL / HMS HEdS-GE / HMS | Come to HEdS-GE, IMMS 1x Come to BBL, HMS 1x | 2.5 h 1.5 h 10 min. |
| Month 22 | t2/directly after intervention completion | i. Behavioral Battery (psychometric testing) ii. COGTEL iii. (f)MRI measurements iv. Blood sampling v. Food Frequency Questionnaire vi. Cognitive reserve index1 (CRIq)8 [ | HEdS-GE / IMMM HEdS-GE / IMMM BB / HMS HEdS-GE / HMS At home HEdS-GE / IMMM | Come to HEdS-GE, IMMM 1x (same session as Behavioral Battery) Come to BBL, HMS 1x Come to HEdS-GE, HMS 1x Send (mail/post) Come to HEdS-GE, IMMM 1x | 2.5 h 15 min. 1.5 h 10 min. 30 min. 15 min. |
| Month 23–26 | Cope with Delays, Analyses & Publications, Congress Attending | ||||
| Month 27 | t3/6 months after intervention completion | i. Behavioral Battery (psychometric testing) ii. (f)MRI measurements iii. Blood sampling | HEdS-GE / IMMM BBL / HMS HEdS-GE / HMS | Come to HEdS-GE, IMMM 1x Come to BBL, HMS 1x Come to HEdS-GE, HMS1x | 2.5 h 1.5 h 10 min. |
| Month 28–36 | Cope with Delays, Analyses & Publications, Congress Attending | ||||
1Presentations at Cité Séniors Genève (http://www.ville-geneve.ch/themes/social/seniors/cite-seniors/); at the HEdS-GE2 and in Hannover at the HMTMH (Hannover University of Music Drama and Media)
2 HEdS-GE Haute école de Genève, 47 av. de Champel 47, 1206 Genève
3 Institute of Music Physiology and Musicians’ Medecine, Hannover, part of the HMTMH
4 Presentation soft-ware (https://pstnet.com/products/e-prime/)
5 Brain and Behaviour Laboratory (BBL, http://bbl.unige.ch/) , University Medical Centre of the University of Geneva
6 Hannover Medical School
7 During the Behavioral Battery several short breaks are included
8 This test has been added posteriorly
Trial Registration Data Set (according to WHO guidelines)
| Data category | Information32 |
|---|---|
| Primary registry and trial identifying number | |
| Date of registration in primary registry | 17.09.2018 |
| Secondary identifying numbers | Study ID number: 81185 |
| Source(s) of monetary or material support | Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF no. 100019E-170,410) and Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG no.323965454) |
| Primary sponsor | SNSF and DFG: Lead Agency grant (two-countries study) |
| Contact for public and scientific queries | Prof. Clara E. James: clara.james@hesge.ch |
| Title | Train the Brain With Music: Brain Plasticity and Cognitive Benefits Induced by Musical Practice in Elderly People in Germany and Switzerland (TBM) |
| Countries of recruitment | Switzerland, Germany |
| Health condition(s) or problem(s) studied | Age-related cognitive decline |
| Intervention(s) | Experimental group: intensive piano learning over 1 year |
| Active control group: musical culture learning over 1 year (history and listening) | |
| Key inclusion and exclusion criteria | Ages eligible for study: 64 to 78 years Sexes eligible for study: both, Accepts healthy volunteers: only |
| Inclusion criteria: Healthy right-handed volunteers, between 64 and 78 years of age, native French/German speakers. No regular musical practice over the lifespan. Only retired individuals may participate. | |
| Exclusion criteria: Impaired/not-corrected auditory or visual accuracy, neurological diseases in the present or the past, cardiovascular diseases, excessive hypertension, obesity, diabetes mellitus, beginning dementia, mild cognitive impairment, clinical depression | |
| Study type | Interventional |
| Allocation: randomized intervention model according to 4 stratification factors (age, gender, score at the COGTEL (global cognition test) and socioeconomic status). Groups are balanced for those factors. Single blind study (subject) | |
| Primary purpose: prevention of cognitive and sensorimotor decline in retired elderly | |
| Date of first enrolment | May 2018 |
| Target sample size | 150 |
| Recruitment status | Completed |
| Primary outcome(s) | Positive transfer effects from intensive piano training (intervention group) - as compared to listening and learning about music without practice (control group) - on age-related cognitive decline: for working memory, executive functions, speed of information processing, auditory selective attention (hearing in noise) and abstract thinking. Associated functional and structural brain plasticity may show in gray and white matter in temporal (medial and lateral), prefrontal and parietal areas. Less decline or increase of gray matter volume and activation change may show in the hippocampus, as well as improved functional networking in frontal areas during working memory tasks. |
| Key secondary outcomes | Benefits of fine perceptual-motor skills may also manifest in the intervention group as compared to the control group associated with functional and structural brain plasticity in sensorimotor areas. Subjective quality of life, verbal memory and hearing in noise may improve in both groups, the latter two associated with functional and structural brain plasticity in auditory and frontal areas. Epigenetic alterations may be induced by piano learning in relation with functional and structural imaging parameters. |