No therapies have proven effective against Alzheimer's disease (AD) dementia. As a result, the field has shifted focus to develop strategies for prevention, early intervention, and the identification of early antecedent biomarkers and risk factors that predict later life vulnerability or resilience to dementia. To address these important scientific goals, an existing cohort of older adults ? well characterized with regard to mid- to later-life metabolic and vascular risk factors ? will be integrated into the Wake Forest ADCC. The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) is a multi-site study of subclinical and incident vascular and metabolic disease, and Wake Forest is one of six clinical sites. This partnership between MESA and the ADCC provides a unique opportunity to leverage the longitudinal characterization of MESA participants to complement and expand our Center's theme focused on metabolic and vascular pathogenetic contributions to AD and other related disorders. In 2000, 734 adults, aged 58 to 97 years (46% African-American, 54% non-Hispanic Caucasian), were enrolled into the Wake Forest MESA cohort. Participants have undergone extensive metabolic phenotyping (e.g., fasting glucose, insulin, hemoglobin A1C, lipid particle size, plasma lipidomic and metabolomic analyses); vascular phenotyping (e.g., arterial stiffness, coronary artery calcification, carotid ultrasound); whole genome and exome sequencing and epigenetic characterization; repeated retinal imaging, and a brief cognitive assessment in 2010-2012. The ADCC MESA Core will add clinical and cognitive assessments (Uniform Data Set and supplemental cognitive tests); neuroimaging (MRI, amyloid PET); and collection of CSF and brains. With the support of an NIA-funded ADCC, we will be able to enroll 540 MESA participants within the first 2 years of our award period and repeat assessments 3 years later, as recommended in the P30 RFA to accomplish the following Specific Aims: 1) assess clinical, cognitive, and neurological endpoints in MESA participants to characterize MCI, AD, VCI, and other related disorders, and to facilitate research focused on relationships between cognitive status and antecedent metabolic and vascular risk factors; 2) conduct longitudinal follow-up of MESA Core participants to permit examination of antecedent metabolic and vascular biomarkers that predict cognitive and biomarker trajectories (decline and resilience), incident MCI, and AD/VCI; 3) provide multidimensional data and other resources to foster systems and pathway analyses of genetic, epigenetic, and phenotypic data to identify the metabolic and vascular pathways that predict dementia risk, and elucidate the clinical and pathophysiologic relationships between AD and VCI to inform the development of novel biomarkers and therapeutic targets; and 4) provide resources to facilitate investigations examining the potential impact of race on relationships between metabolic and vascular pathways, cognitive function, and AD/VCI biomarkers.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
5P30AG049638-04
Application #
9753088
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAG1)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2019-07-01
Budget End
2020-06-30
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2019
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Wake Forest University Health Sciences
Department
Type
DUNS #
937727907
City
Winston-Salem
State
NC
Country
United States
Zip Code
27157
Nagpal, Ravinder; Wang, Shaohua; Solberg Woods, Leah C et al. (2018) Comparative Microbiome Signatures and Short-Chain Fatty Acids in Mouse, Rat, Non-human Primate, and Human Feces. Front Microbiol 9:2897
Schaffert, Jeff; LoBue, Christian; White, Charles L et al. (2018) Traumatic brain injury history is associated with an earlier age of dementia onset in autopsy-confirmed Alzheimer's disease. Neuropsychology 32:410-416
Espeland, Mark A; Luchsinger, Jose A; Neiberg, Rebecca H et al. (2018) Long Term Effect of Intensive Lifestyle Intervention on Cerebral Blood Flow. J Am Geriatr Soc 66:120-126
Davis, Jeremy J (2018) Performance validity in older adults: Observed versus predicted false positive rates in relation to number of tests administered. J Clin Exp Neuropsychol 40:1013-1021
Hughes, Timothy M; Lockhart, Samuel N; Smagula, Stephen F (2018) Blood Pressure's Role in Alzheimer Disease Pathology. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 26:23-24
Latimer, Caitlin S; Shively, Carol A; Keene, C Dirk et al. (2018) A nonhuman primate model of early Alzheimer's disease pathologic change: Implications for disease pathogenesis. Alzheimers Dement :
Weintraub, Sandra; Besser, Lilah; Dodge, Hiroko H et al. (2018) Version 3 of the Alzheimer Disease Centers' Neuropsychological Test Battery in the Uniform Data Set (UDS). Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord 32:10-17
Wilmoth, Kristin; LoBue, Christian; Clem, Matthew A et al. (2018) Consistency of traumatic brain injury reporting in older adults with and without cognitive impairment. Clin Neuropsychol 32:524-529
Crum, Jana; Wilson, Jeffrey; Sabbagh, Marwan (2018) Does taking statins affect the pathological burden in autopsy-confirmed Alzheimer's dementia? Alzheimers Res Ther 10:104
Kamara, Dennis M; Gangishetti, Umesh; Gearing, Marla et al. (2018) Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy: Similarity in African-Americans and Caucasians with Alzheimer's Disease. J Alzheimers Dis 62:1815-1826

Showing the most recent 10 out of 34 publications