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The Clinician's Interview‐Based Impression of Change (Plus caregiver input) and goal attainment in two dementia drug trials: Clinical meaningfulness and the initial treatment response
Author(s) -
Stanley Justin,
Howlett Susan E.,
Dunn Taylor,
Rockwood Kenneth
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
alzheimer's and dementia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.713
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1552-5279
pISSN - 1552-5260
DOI - 10.1002/alz.12242
Subject(s) - goal attainment scaling , dementia , psychology , clinical trial , clinical global impression , medicine , psychiatry , disease , pathology , alternative medicine , placebo , intervention (counseling)
The Clinician's Interview‐Based Impression of Change Plus caregiver input (CIBIC‐Plus) has been widely used in dementia drug trials to evaluate cognition, behavior, and function. New trials of symptomatic drugs forecast renewed interest in this measure. METHODS To test its clinical meaningfulness, we examined how CIBIC‐Plus performed in two cholinesterase inhibitor trials compared to goal attainment scaling Scale (GAS) scores, a patient‐reported outcome measure. RESULTS Net goal attainment was seen for all but one GAS domains in subjects who improved on the CIBIC‐Plus. Subjects who improved initially on CIBIC‐Plus scores were likely to remain improved across all other outcomes for each trial's duration, except for Disability Assessment for Dementia scores. DISCUSSION The initial response to treatment, as assessed by CIBIC‐Plus, remained stable for most outcome measures. Even small CIBIC‐Plus improvement changes are associated with clinically meaningful change as assessed by GAS. Other tests detect decline better than improvement.

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