grant

Longitudinal validation of cerebral small vessel disease biomarkers in diverse community-based older adults without dementia

Organization RUSH UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTERLocation CHICAGO, UNITED STATESPosted 29 Sept 2021Deadline 31 Jul 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2025AD dementiaASCVDAcademic Medical CentersActive Follow-upAfrican AmericanAfrican American groupAfrican American individualAfrican American peopleAfrican American populationAfrican AmericansAfro AmericanAfroamericanAgingAgreementAlzheimer Type DementiaAlzheimer disease dementiaAlzheimer sclerosisAlzheimer syndromeAlzheimer'sAlzheimer's DiseaseAlzheimers DementiaAmentiaArteriolosclerosesAtherosclerosisAtherosclerotic Cardiovascular DiseaseAutomationAutopsyBiological MarkersBleedingBloodBlood Reticuloendothelial SystemBlood VesselsBrainBrain Nervous SystemCaucasianCaucasian RaceCaucasiansCaucasoidCaucasoid RaceCerebral Amyloid AngiopathyCerebral small vessel diseaseCessation of lifeCharacteristicsClinicalClinical EvaluationClinical MarkersClinical TestingClinical TrialsCognitionCognitiveCognitive DisturbanceCognitive ImpairmentCognitive declineCognitive function abnormalCohort StudiesCommunitiesComputer softwareConcurrent StudiesCongophilic AngiopathyDataData SetDeathDementiaDiagnosisDisturbance in cognitionDrugsEncephalonEnrollmentFutureHemorrhageIllinoisImpaired cognitionIndividualInfarctionInfrastructureInvestigatorsLatinoLatino PopulationLatino groupLatino individualLatino peopleLatinosMR ImagingMR TomographyMRIMRI biomarkerMRI markerMRIsMachine LearningMagnetic Resonance ImagingMedical Imaging, Magnetic Resonance / Nuclear Magnetic ResonanceMedicationMemoryMicroscopicMicrovascular DysfunctionMinorityMissionMonitorNMR ImagingNMR TomographyNamesNuclear Magnetic Resonance ImagingOccidentalParentsParticipantPathologicPathologyPerformancePeriodicalsPharmaceutical PreparationsPopulation HeterogeneityPreventionPrevention trialPrimary Senile Degenerative DementiaProcessResearchResearch PersonnelResearch ResourcesResearchersResourcesSiteSoftwareTechnologyTestingTimeTrainingUniversity Medical CentersUpdateValidationWhite Matter DiseaseWorkZeugmatographyactive followupatheromatosisatherosclerotic diseaseatherosclerotic vascular diseasebio-markersbiologic markerbiomarkerbiomarker selectionblood lossblood-based biomarkerblood-based markercerebral small vessel disordercerebrovascular amyloidosisclinical biomarkersclinical testclinical validationclinically useful biomarkerscognitive dysfunctioncognitive losscohortdata sharingdiverse populationsdrug/agentenrollfollow upfollow-upfollowed upfollowupheterogeneous populationhigh riskimaging biomarkerimaging markerimaging-based biological markerimaging-based biomarkerimaging-based markerindexinginfarctmachine based learningmagnetic resonance imaging biomarkermagnetic resonance imaging markermicrovascular complicationsmicrovascular diseasemild cognitive disordermild cognitive impairmentnamenamednamingnecropsyneuropathologicneuropathologicalneuropathologynew markernon-dementednondementednovel biomarkernovel markerolder adultolder adulthoodparentperiodicperiodicalpopulation diversitypostmortemprimary degenerative dementiarecruitreligious order studyresearch clinical testingresearch studyresponse to therapyresponse to treatmentsenile dementia of the Alzheimer typesmall vessel diseasetherapeutic responsetherapy responsetreatment responsetreatment responsivenessvalidationsvascularwhite race
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Full Description

ABSTRACT
Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) encompasses a range of common processes and pathologies

(arteriolosclerosis, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, small vessel atherosclerosis, small and microscopic infarcts and

bleeds, enlarged perivascular spaces, and white matter disease) that we and others have shown are associated

with impaired cognition and dementia (VCID). High-quality biomarkers of SVD are critically needed to advance

diagnosis, prevention and treatment of small vessel VCID. The mission of the MarkVCID consortium has been to

identify the most promising biomarkers of SVD, and conduct analytical (instrumental) validation and preliminary

clinical validation. Our team at Rush University Medical Center and Illinois Institute of Technology was privileged to

be active participants in this initial work. We are now eager to continue this collaborative effort with this proposal.

The objective of the proposed project is to conduct rigorous longitudinal clinical validation of MarkVCID-selected

biomarkers in a diverse cohort free of dementia, and to investigate the associations of these biomarkers with SVD

neuropathologic indices, working synergistically with other consortium sites and contributing scientific expertise,

experimental infrastructure, and scientific guidance. Specifically, we propose to recruit, enroll and longitudinally

assess a large, diverse, community-based group of older adults without dementia using MarkVCID clinical

evaluation and biomarkers, to test the hypotheses that the biomarkers are associated with cognitive decline and

SVD neuropathologic indices. This will be a nested sub-study of participants of the Rush Memory and Aging Project

(MAP), Minority Aging Research Study (MARS), Religious Orders Study (ROS), Clinical Core (CC) and Latino Core

(LATC) of the Rush Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center, which are on-going longitudinal, clinical-pathologic

cohort studies of aging that recruit non-demented individuals and have high follow-up rates. MARS and CC recruit

exclusively African American, and LATC recruits Latino older adults. Our past contributions in MarkVCID support

our current aims. First, we demonstrated our ability to recruit and follow a large and diverse group of non-demented

older adults, some of whom died, enabling autopsy studies. Second, we developed and made publicly available a

novel biomarker of arteriolosclerosis with high performance, named ARTS, which we trained using machine

learning on MRI and pathology data. Third, we contributed to the analytical and initial clinical validation of multiple

MarkVCID biomarkers. Fourth, we led the MarkVCID imaging biomarkers committee and were active in all functions

of the consortium. We propose to leverage our expertise and infrastructure to conduct rigorous longitudinal clinical

validation of MarkVCID biomarkers in a diverse population, and to investigate the associations of these biomarkers

with SVD neuropathologic indices.

Grant Number: 5U01NS100599-09
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Konstantinos Arfanakis

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