BackgroundDementia impacts individuals, families, and society, necessitating effective prevention strategies.ObjectiveTo evaluate the feasibility of a community-adapted multi-domain intervention for dementia prevention among older adults in Obu City, Japan and how uncertainties in implementing definitive trials can be reduced.MethodsA 12-month one-arm intervention trial was conducted with 80 community-dwelling older adults aged 65-86 years from two district regions. The multi-domain intervention included physical exercise, nutrition guidance, cognitive training, social participation, and vascular risk management. The primary outcome was the continuation rate, defined as the proportion of participants attending >
60% of classes from the initial assessment to 6 months. Secondary outcomes, such as fidelity, acceptability, and appropriateness, were assessed through qualitative and quantitative evaluations. Additionally, health outcomes, including cognitive function and overall lifestyle, were evaluated.ResultsThe study achieved continuation rates of 75% and 76% at 6 and 12 months, respectively, indicating high feasibility. Participants showed high program acceptability (average acceptance score, 4.4 of 5). Fidelity was high regarding content coverage and duration, although the frequency and coverage varied between study sites. Cognitive function remained stable
food-diversity status improved significantly over the study period, though the absence of a control group limits causal interpretation of these changes.ConclusionsThe community-adapted multi-domain intervention for dementia prevention demonstrated high feasibility and acceptability among older adults. Our findings can help reduce uncertainties and support planning future definitive trials to evaluate the effectiveness of community-based dementia-prevention programs.