ADRC Subcore in Clinical Pharmacology. The clinical neuropharmacology subcore for the Alzheimer's Disease Research Center Consortium of Los Angeles and Orange Counties (ADRC) maintains an infrastructure to support, strengthen, and facilitate clinical pharmacological research in the ADRC. The core improves the quality of clinical research and hypothesis testing; increases the kinds of clinical studies performed; and increases and expedites patient access to studies at the ADRC. The resources of the core are utilized by and benefit individual ongoing projects and investigators and foster new meritorious clinical research projects. The core is based at the Tower Hall Clinical on the USC School of Medicine campus, and consists of a program director, Dr. Schneider, geriatric physicians, a bilingual clinical psychologist, a research nurse/coordinator, and administrative assistant, and research assistants. Specific goals include the performance of pilot or preliminary clinical pharmacological investigations to test new hypotheses; enhancement of recruitment of ethnic minority subjects to clinical investigations; conducting controlled studies of treatments for behavioral symptoms in Alzheimer's dementia; planning and developing future pharmacological work. The core has been in operation only since September, 1992. Current objectives are: To further develop the administrative structure to efficiently coordinate and develop clinical pharmacological research, involving comprehensive documentation, evaluation of patients, assessing the validity and reliability of evaluation methods and results; and providing long-term follow-up of former and current research subjects to facilitate clinical investigations and evaluation of various therapies and interventions directed toward treatment an management of AD patients, including pilot, phase I and phase II clinical evaluations; characterization of the pharmacokinetics, including the design and implementation of dose escalation and safety studies; to enhance recruitment of ethnic-minority subjects to the pharmacology core, ADRC Clinical Core, Spanish-speaking program, and to the satellite program: to undertake pilot studies of both cognitively and behavioral active medications in AD patients with symptomatic behaviors such as agitation, psychosis and major depression; to provide consultative and educational resources on investigational medications and the clinical pharmacology of AD to other ADRC components, to the community; and to cooperate with other ADRC clinical and basic research programs in the acquisition of research specimens and measures.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Specialized Center (P50)
Project #
5P50AG005142-14
Application #
6234088
Study Section
Project Start
1997-04-15
Project End
1998-03-31
Budget Start
1996-10-01
Budget End
1997-09-30
Support Year
14
Fiscal Year
1997
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Southern California
Department
Type
DUNS #
041544081
City
Los Angeles
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90089
Nation, Daniel A (2018) Blood Pressure and Cerebral Blood Flow in Alzheimer Disease. Hypertension 72:68-69
Hadjichrysanthou, Christoforos; McRae-McKee, Kevin; Evans, Stephanie et al. (2018) Potential Factors Associated with Cognitive Improvement of Individuals Diagnosed with Mild Cognitive Impairment or Dementia in Longitudinal Studies. J Alzheimers Dis 66:587-600
Hanfelt, John J; Peng, Limin; Goldstein, Felicia C et al. (2018) Latent classes of mild cognitive impairment are associated with clinical outcomes and neuropathology: Analysis of data from the National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center. Neurobiol Dis 117:62-71
Burke, Shanna L; Hu, Tianyan; Fava, Nicole M et al. (2018) Sex differences in the development of mild cognitive impairment and probable Alzheimer's disease as predicted by hippocampal volume or white matter hyperintensities. J Women Aging :1-25
Wang, Qi; Guo, Lei; Thompson, Paul M et al. (2018) The Added Value of Diffusion-Weighted MRI-Derived Structural Connectome in Evaluating Mild Cognitive Impairment: A Multi-Cohort Validation1. J Alzheimers Dis 64:149-169
Wang, Tingyan; Qiu, Robin G; Yu, Ming (2018) Predictive Modeling of the Progression of Alzheimer's Disease with Recurrent Neural Networks. Sci Rep 8:9161
Agogo, George O; Ramsey, Christine M; Gnjidic, Danijela et al. (2018) Longitudinal associations between different dementia diagnoses and medication use jointly accounting for dropout. Int Psychogeriatr 30:1477-1487
Aydogan, Dogu Baran; Jacobs, Russell; Dulawa, Stephanie et al. (2018) When tractography meets tracer injections: a systematic study of trends and variation sources of diffusion-based connectivity. Brain Struct Funct 223:2841-2858
Gahm, Jin Kyu; Shi, Yonggang; Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (2018) Riemannian metric optimization on surfaces (RMOS) for intrinsic brain mapping in the Laplace-Beltrami embedding space. Med Image Anal 46:189-201
Emrani, Sheina; Libon, David J; Lamar, Melissa et al. (2018) Assessing Working Memory in Mild Cognitive Impairment with Serial Order Recall. J Alzheimers Dis 61:917-928

Showing the most recent 10 out of 590 publications