Actively Recruiting

Phase Not Applicable
Age: 60Years - 75Years
All Genders
Healthy Volunteers
NCT06661486

Evidence-based Lifestyle Interventions for the Delay of Cognitive Decline Among Older Singaporeans

Led by National University of Singapore · Updated on 2026-04-08

120

Participants Needed

2

Research Sites

182 weeks

Total Duration

On this page

AI-Summary

What this Trial Is About

The investigators aim to investigate the relationship between lifestyle factors and cognitive decline among older Singaporeans and assess the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of a lifestyle intervention programme in delaying cognitive decline. Healthy lifestyle is a way of living that can lower down disease risk and promote health and wellbeing. Accumulating evidences support that lifestyle factors contribute to the development of dementia and hence modifying lifestyle could be a promising approach for dementia prevention. The intervention will focus on the promotion of a brain-healthy lifestyle, with special attention paid to common problems among local older adults. The investigators will assess cognitive and biological changes using the following outcome measures. Primary outcome: the processing speed domain Z score derived from raw scores of three tests including the symbol digit modality test, Colour trial test, and Stroop test (condition 2). Secondary outcome: i. epigenetic age (DNA methylation), ii. plasma-based markers of inflammation, iii. activities of daily living and instrumental activities of daily living, iv. Health-related quality of life measured by the EQ-5D-5L scale, v. wellbeing measured by the ICECAP-O (ICEpop CAPability measure for Older people), vi. other neurocognitive assessment tests. The investigators hypothesize that: 1. Lifestyle factors are associated with cognitive decline, epigenetic age, and systematic chronic inflammation. 2. Evidence-based lifestyle intervention focusing on common problems among local population can delay cognitive decline, slow epigenetic ageing, and produce favorable changes on chronic systemic inflammation. 3. Changes in biological markers will correlate with changes in cognitive function, and hence partially explains the observed clinical efficacy. 4. The interventions may also improve daily functioning, health-related quality of life, and wellbeing. 5. Interventions delivered in an individualized manner would produce more benefits than interventions delivered uniformly without considering individual's risk profile and personal and social context.

CONDITIONS

Official Title

Evidence-based Lifestyle Interventions for the Delay of Cognitive Decline Among Older Singaporeans

Who Can Participate

Age: 60Years - 75Years
All Genders
Healthy Volunteers

Eligibility Criteria

Eligible

You may qualify if you...

  • Age between 60 and 75 years
  • Singapore Modified Mini-Mental State Examination score below education-specific cutoffs: <25 for no education, <27 for primary school, and <29 for secondary school and above
  • No dementia (Clinical Dementia Rating global score of 0)
Not Eligible

You will not qualify if you...

  • Terminal illness or aphasia preventing effective participation
  • Marked hearing impairment
  • Participation in another interventional study

AI-Screening

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Trial Site Locations

Total: 2 locations

1

National University Singapore, Tahir Foundation Building

Singapore, Singapore, Singapore, 117549

Actively Recruiting

2

National University Singapore

Singapore, Singapore, Singapore, 119228

Actively Recruiting

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Research Team

K

Kai Xuan Lim, Bachelor Degree in Psy

CONTACT

How is the study designed?

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Masking

DOUBLE

Allocation

RANDOMIZED

Model

PARALLEL

Primary Purpose

PREVENTION

Number of Arms

3

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Evidence-based Lifestyle Interventions for the Delay of Cognitive Decline Among Older Singaporeans | DecenTrialz