NCT04270474 · ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

Reducing Risk of Dementia Through Deprescribing

This trial is testing whether helping older adults stop or reduce certain common medications called anticholinergics — used for things like bladder control, allergies, and sleep — can protect cognitive health. Researchers are comparing a structured deprescribing program against usual care to see if reducing these drugs affects dementia risk. This is a Phase NA, meaning it is a pragmatic real-world trial rather than a traditional drug-development phase.

Eligibility criteria

Inclusion Criteria for Participants:
* Age 65 and older;
* At least one office visit to their primary care physician within the previous 12 months;
* Use of a target anticholinergic medication within the last two weeks OR medical record evidence of exposure to target anticholinergic medications at or above a cognitive risk threshold in the prior 12 months
* Able to communicate in English;
* Access to a telephone
Exclusion Criteria for Participants:
* Permanent resident of an extended care facility (nursing home)
* Diagnosis of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or schizoaffective disorder defined by International Classification of Diseases (ICD) version 9/10 codes
* Diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease or Related Dementia as determined by (a), (b), or (c) below:
  1. ICD-9/10 codes, or
  2. Current use of a medication for Alzheimer's Disease or a Related Dementia, or
  3. A pattern of responses to the Functional Activities Questionnaire (FAQ) that indicate dementia (i.e., ≥ 3 FAQ items are scored at "requires assistance," or if ≥ 1 FAQ item is scored at "dependent").

The sponsor's own eligibility wording, lightly reformatted. The study team makes the final eligibility decision — worth discussing with your doctor.

Eligibility criteria as of 2025-03-14

View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov

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