# Effectiveness of physio-cognitive dual-task training on improving global cognition, health-related quality of life, and physical outcomes among older adults with neurocognitive disorders: an umbrella review

**Authors:** Calvin Wei Jie Chern, Ling Jie Cheng, Glenys Shu Wen Chiang, Siat Yee Yap, Thuy Anh Giang, Siew Tiang Lau

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/ageing/afag061 · Age and Ageing · 2026-03-27

## TL;DR

This review examines whether combining physical and cognitive training helps older adults with brain disorders improve thinking, quality of life, and physical abilities.

## Contribution

The study provides an umbrella review of PCDT effectiveness across multiple outcomes in neurocognitive disorders.

## Key findings

- PCDT showed small improvements in cognition and daily living but not in quality of life.
- Study-level analysis confirmed benefits for cognition and quality of life but not physical outcomes.
- People with dementia benefited less than those with mild cognitive impairment.

## Abstract

Physio-cognitive dual-task training (PCDT), combining physical and cognitive tasks, is a promising approach. However, clarity regarding its effectiveness and evidence credibility remains limited.

To evaluate PCDT effectiveness on global cognition, health-related quality of life, and physical outcomes (activities of daily living, gait, balance) in older adults with neurocognitive disorders, assess review quality and evidence certainty, and explore moderator effects.

Eight databases and grey literature were searched to 31 December 2024. Two reviewers independently screened, extracted data, and assessed review quality (AMSTAR-2) and evidence certainty (GRADE). Meta-level and study-level meta-analyses were conducted. Subgroup analyses and meta-regression explored moderator effects. PROSPERO: CRD42024622115.

Seventeen reviews with 47 unique meta-analyses involving 81 unique studies were included. Meta-level analyses indicated small significant improvements across outcomes except health-related quality of life. Study-level analyses, correcting for overlapping primary studies, confirmed significant benefits for global cognition and health-related quality of life; however, physical outcome effects were non-significant. Prediction intervals for all outcomes were non-significant. Simultaneous PCDT and higher weekly frequency showed greater benefits. Participants with dementia benefited less than those with mild cognitive impairment. Age was not a significant moderator. Most reviews were low or critically low quality, and evidence certainty was low.

PCDT is potentially associated with improvements in cognitive, physical, and quality-of-life outcomes among older adults with neurocognitive disorders. However, prediction intervals suggest effectiveness uncertainty, and heavy sample weighting toward prodromal stages warrants caution. PCDT may not be indicated for cognitive improvement in established dementia. High-quality reviews are urgently needed.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** dementia (MONDO:0001627)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** CA (MESH:D001927), impairment in activities of daily living (MESH:D020773), Dementia (MESH:D003704), Neurocognitive disorders (MESH:D019965), impaired gait and balance (MESH:D020234), Vascular dementia (MESH:D015140), PCDT (MESH:D009105), Alzheimer's dementia (MESH:D000544), cognitive decline (MESH:D003072), Parkinson's (MESH:D010300), CCA (MESH:D000080041)
- **Chemicals:** PCDT (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

73 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13023371/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13023371