Virtual Reality Combined With Psychoeducation to Improve Emotional Well‐Being in Informal Caregivers of Alzheimer's Disease Patients: Rationale and Study Design of a Randomized Controlled Trial

Author:

Festari Cristina1ORCID,Bonomini Cristina2,Rosini Sandra2,Gattuso Maria3,Singh Solorzano Claudio1ORCID,Zanetti Orazio2,Corbo Daniele4ORCID,Agnelli Giancarlo5,Quattrini Giulia1ORCID,Ferrari Clarissa6ORCID,Gasparotti Roberto4,Pievani Michela1ORCID,Morganti Francesca37ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Alzheimer's Neuroimaging and Epidemiology IRCCS Istituto Centro San Giovanni di Dio Fatebenefratelli Brescia Italy

2. Alzheimer Unit IRCCS Istituto Centro San Giovanni di Dio Fatebenefratelli Brescia Italy

3. Department of Human and Social Sciences University of Bergamo Bergamo Italy

4. Department of Medical Surgical Specialties, Radiological Sciences and Public Health University of Brescia Brescia Italy

5. Department of Physics University of Milan Milan Italy

6. Research and Clinical Trials Office Fondazione Poliambulanza Istituto Ospedaliero Brescia Italy

7. CHL—Centre for Healthy Longevity University of Bergamo Bergamo Italy

Abstract

ABSTRACTObjectivesCare for community‐dwelling people with dementia is frequently delegated to relatives, who find themselves in the role of informal caregivers with no practical management knowledge. This situation exposes caregivers to increased risk for emotional wellbeing. The current study aims to test whether the integration of the efficacy of an immersive virtual reality (VR) experience into an online psychoeducational program impacts caregiver empathy and therefore emotional wellbeing.MethodsOne‐hundred informal caregivers of mild‐to‐moderate Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients will be enrolled and randomly assigned to (i) an online psychoeducational program (control arm); or (ii) an online psychoeducational program integrated with VR (experimental arm). VR will consist of 360‐degree videos involving the caregivers to an immersive experience of dementia symptoms from the patient's perspective. Before, after the intervention and after 2 months, all participants will complete validated clinical scales for caregiver burden and anxiety (primary outcomes) and sense of competence and dispositional empathy (secondary outcomes). A subsample of 50 participants will also undergo MRI exam, including structural and functional (resting‐state and task‐functional MRI [fMRI]) sequences. The fMRI task paradigm will use emotional stimuli to evaluate the neural correlate of empathy, by stressing its cognitive and affective components. The main outcome will be the change in the clinical assessment; the secondary outcome will be the change in brain connectivity of networks subserving the empathic and emotional functioning.ResultsWe expect that the psychoeducational program will decrease anxiety and stress, enabling caregivers to perceive themselves capable of managing AD patients at home, educating them on symptom handling and boosting their cognitive empathy. In the experimental intervention, the VR‐based experience will act as an add‐on to psychoeducation, leading to greater improvement in the assessed clinical dimensions. VR should, in fact, enable a deeper understanding of disease symptoms and improve caregivers' cognitive empathy. We expect that the experimental intervention will result in deeper comprehension of disease symptoms and further strengthen caregivers' cognitive empathy. At the neural level, we expect to observe increased activation in circuits subserving cognitive empathy and decreased activation in circuits underlying affective empathy.ConclusionsTo the best of our knowledge, this will be the first randomized controlled trial assessing the effect of combining psychoeducational interventions with VR‐based experience in caregivers, and assessing both clinical and imaging outcomes.Trial RegistrationRegistered in ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05780476)

Funder

Ministero della Salute

Alzheimer's Association

Publisher

Wiley

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