Grants and Contracts Details
Description
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathophysiology seldom occurs in isolation, and it is widely established from the
neuropathology literature that the majority of individuals with dementia have multiple etiology dementia (MED). MED is
common but undetected in extant major cohort studies and treatment trials for AD; many studies intentionally restrict
clinical heterogeneity to an assumed single etiology by using narrowly defined clinical enrollment criteria. A major gap in
our field is the lack of validated tools to detect MED in-vivo. The next era of large-scale imaging biomarker studies for AD
and related disorders (ADRD) will require strategies commensurate with the known but largely unaddressed problem of
etiologic heterogeneity. The Alzheimer’s Disease Research Centers (ADRCs) are uniquely positioned to meet this need.
Collectively the 37 ADRCs follow ~14,000 active enrollees with high brain donor and autopsy rates (>60%). The ADRCs
recruit across the clinical severity continuum and amply represent the several diseases comprising ADRD. Now, as a
consortium, the centers will conduct a uniform imaging protocol capable of elucidating individualized etiological profiles
including foundational PET imaging for AD proteinopathy (Amyloid and Tau), vascular burden with MRI and additional
structural MRI and FDG PET for assessing the several patterns of morphologic and metabolic Neurodegeneration
signatures of both AD and non-AD proteinopathies on deeply phenotyped patients. Design: This is a longitudinal imaging
study at 2-year intervals that is superimposed on and fully integrated with the ongoing uniform cognitive and clinical
data collection the 37 ADRCs already do. We will study 2,000 ethnoculturally diverse ADRC participants that are either
clinically unimpaired (CU; N=800) or impaired (N=1,200) where AD is a considered, though need not be the primary
suspected etiology. Aim 1 creates the ATN cohort through prospective imaging and plasma collection and establishes the
foundational shared resource in conjunction with the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center (NACC) with linkage to
the vast clinical, cognitive, and genetic datasets on these same participants. In Aim 2 we examine the temporal
progression of the two most common etiologies—AD and vascular disease. We examine onset ages and duration of each
and their joint effect on cognitive decline. Aim 3 focuses on other common proteinopathies. Classification and joint
modelling methods will be applied to estimate etiologic composition and the effect of multi-proteinopathy on clinical
and cognitive change. ATN imaging–a critical foundation for characterizing likely dementia etiologies—is needed on this
expertly-diagnosed, uniformly evaluated MED ADRD cohort where neuropathology can inform clinicopathologic
correlation, mechanistic underpinnings, and strategic diagnostic and therapeutic development. The consortium of
ADRCs have the expertise and capacity to conduct this study and will work together to ensure its success and its impact
on the field.
Status | Active |
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Effective start/end date | 9/1/24 → 8/31/28 |
Funding
- University of Washington: $417,035.00
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