Skip to main content
Alzheimer's & Dementia logoLink to Alzheimer's & Dementia
. 2025 Jan 9;20(Suppl 7):e087735. doi: 10.1002/alz.087735

The MindMoves Trial: Effect of Lifestyle Physical Activity and Cognitive Training Interventions on Cognition in Older Women with Cardiovascular Disease

Shannon Halloway 1,, Zoe Arvanitakis 2,3, Michael E Schoeny 4, Annabelle Santos Volgman 3, Susan J Pressler 5, Sachin Vispute 4, JoEllen Wilbur 4, Lisa L Barnes 3,6
PMCID: PMC11715361

Abstract

Background

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) increases the risk of cognitive impairment (CI), particularly in women. Physical activity and cognitive training can improve cognition, with potential interactive effects. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of MindMoves, a 24‐week multidomain physical activity and cognitive training intervention, on cognition in older women with CVD.

Method

This randomized controlled trial (NCT04556305) with a 2×2 factorial design tested the independent and combined efficacies of Mind (tablet‐based cognitive training) and Move (lifestyle physical activity with goal‐setting and group meetings) on change in cognition (episodic memory, semantic memory, working memory, and executive function). Women (n = 253) aged 65 years and older with CVD and without CI at baseline were randomized to (1) Mind, (2) Move, (3) MindMoves, or (4) usual care. Intervention orientations were in‐person, and all other intervention activities were home‐based. From September 2020–December 2023, participants completed telephone neuropsychological tests and questionnaires at baseline, 24, 48, and 72 weeks.

Result

Participants were, on average, 72.4 years old at baseline (range = 65‐90), primarily of non‐Hispanic White (54%) and non‐Hispanic Black (38%) racial backgrounds, and 60% graduated college. A total of 86% (n = 218) of participants completed the 72‐week data collection. Attrition was not a function of intervention condition, sociodemographics, or baseline cognition (all p’s > .05). On average, all participants showed improvement in episodic memory and executive function. In multilevel mixed models adjusted for age, education, and racial and ethnic background, the main effects of Mind and Move, and the interactive effects (Mind*Move interaction), on linear change over 72 weeks were not statistically significant for any of the four cognition outcomes. In additional models that tested the intervention effects averaged across all follow‐up timepoints, none of the intervention conditions were associated with cognition.

Conclusion

Although participants improved in two domains of cognition, there were no differential effects of the intervention conditions (cognitive training and/or physical activity) in this cohort of older women with CVD. Future analyses will examine intervention effects on serum biomarkers that may provide additional insights of efficacy.


Articles from Alzheimer's & Dementia are provided here courtesy of Wiley

RESOURCES