Actively Recruiting

Phase Not Applicable
Age: 60Years +
All Genders
NCT04989608

Correlation Between Cognition and Neuroimaging in TIA Patients

Led by University Hospital, Caen · Updated on 2025-07-25

100

Participants Needed

1

Research Sites

286 weeks

Total Duration

On this page

AI-Summary

What this Trial Is About

Context: Cognitive impairment is common after a stroke. Out of 100 patients who have suffered a stroke, 50 will develop cognitive impairment. For 16 of them, they will be responsible for an impact on autonomy (major cognitive disorder). They are conventionally attributed either to the location of the lesions or to their general volume. However, recent literature emphasizes the presence of cognitive impairment after a transient ischemic attack (TIA), when by definition the symptoms are transient and imaging without recent ischemic injury. The mechanisms of cognitive impairment in TIA are therefore poorly understood at present. There is evidence in animal models and humans for persistent brain toxicity from ischemia even in the absence of established necrosis. However, to what extent this toxicity may explain the cognitive impairment seen in TIA is not known. Indeed, the latter could just as much have the effect of vascular risk factors which significantly increase cognitive risk even in the absence of an acute event. Objective: The objective of the Cog-TIA program is therefore to identify whether the transient ischemic attack may be responsible for long-term structural changes in neuroimaging in the ischemic territory and whether these changes are correlated with changes in cognitive efficiency. Material and methods: The project is based on the Normandy-Stroke population cohort which includes patients from Caen and the surrounding area who have had a stroke or TIA. The protocol provides for neuropsychological tests evaluating the main cognitive domains at 1 year and 3 years after the initial event. The Cog-TIA project is designed as an ancillary study to the Normandy-Stroke project with the objective of including 50 patients from this cohort who presented with a transient ischemic attack. Each patient will receive a structural MRI at the same time as the neuropsychological assessments scheduled for the Normandy-Stroke study. Analyzes will be performed from T1 sequences, Proton density with centered on the hippocampus and diffusion tensors. For the T1 and proton density sequences, the analyzes will compare the volumes of the different structures longitudinally (in particular: the total hippocampal volume and of the subfields, lobar, thalamic and pallidal volumes). For the diffusion tensor analyzes, the anisotropy maps will be compared longitudinally. For each structure showing significant variation during follow-up, correlations will be made with the decline in performance on neuropsychological tests calculated using composite scores. Cognitive decline may be partly attributed to TIA if it is correlated with abnormalities in the affected hemisphere.

CONDITIONS

Official Title

Correlation Between Cognition and Neuroimaging in TIA Patients

Who Can Participate

Age: 60Years +
All Genders

Eligibility Criteria

Eligible

You may qualify if you...

  • Patient over 60 years of age with a transient ischemic attack (focal neurological deficit of less than 24 hours without ischemic injury on diffusion MRI performed in the week following the event)
  • Patient having signed a free and informed consent to participate in the Normandy-Stroke cohort
  • Subject over 60 years old (control group)
  • Subject included in the Medit-AGEING research protocol (control group)
  • Subject with one or more risk factor(s) for cerebrovascular disease (control group)
  • Subject not opposing the use of their data for the Cog-Tia study (control group)
Not Eligible

You will not qualify if you...

  • Patient with contraindications to performing a brain MRI
  • Neurological co-morbidity such as history of severe head trauma, dementia, brain tumor, stroke, or psychosis
  • Refusal to participate in the Normandy-Stroke cohort
  • Persons deprived of their liberty by judicial or administrative decision, undergoing psychiatric care, or admitted to health or social establishments for reasons other than research
  • Adult persons under legal protection or unable to express consent
  • Subject refusing use of their data for the Cog-Tia study (control group)
  • New stroke during study participation

AI-Screening

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Trial Site Locations

Total: 1 location

1

Caen University Hospital

Caen, France

Actively Recruiting

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Research Team

R

Romain SCHNECKENBURGER, MD

CONTACT

How is the study designed?

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Masking

NONE

Allocation

NON_RANDOMIZED

Model

PARALLEL

Primary Purpose

DIAGNOSTIC

Number of Arms

2

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Correlation Between Cognition and Neuroimaging in TIA Patients | DecenTrialz