Alzheimer's disease is a degenerative condition affecting the brain and is the most frequent form of dementia in older adults. Dementia is currently a major healthcare issue in the UK, affecting approximately a million people. The progression of the disease varies between individuals and the early stages may be characterised by only minimal changes in memory and thinking. These changes could remain undetected as the symptoms may be mistakenly regarded as normal age-related forgetfulness. However, dementia is not part of the normal ageing process. The disease process is now known to start at least 20 years prior to the emergence of symptoms. A protein called amyloid starts to deposit in the brain, forming clumps referred to as 'plaques'. Another protein called tau sticks to other tau molecules inside the brain cell and forms structures called 'tangles'. These changes cause damage to the brain cells, disrupting their normal functioning, leading to inflammation and ultimately destruction of the brain cells. So far, there is no cure for Alzheimer's disease, but by better understanding the changes that occur over time in the brain, scientists can find ways of detecting and therefore diagnosing and treating the disease earlier. One way in which scientists learn about how a disease develops, is by following people unaffected by the condition over an extended period of time. The same tests and sample collections are repeated to monitor any clinical changes. These are known as longitudinal studies, and CHARIOT:PRO studies are examples of this. The CHARIOT:PRO Longitudinal Study (CPLS) is an observational study of 600 participants aged \>65 years old which aims to evaluate cognition (thinking abilities) and biomarkers (biological markers which indicate the presence of disease e.g. amyloid) over time in older adults. The participants in CPLS were all screened as part of the CHARIOT:PRO Sub-Study (CPSS1) in 2015-2017. Visit 1 will be conducted within eight weeks after the Study Entry Visit (SEV). Visits 2-7 will follow at six-monthly intervals from Visit 1. During visits, information relating to health, medication, family history of dementia, self-reported cognitive function and anthropometrics will be collected. The cognitive assessments PACC5 and RBANS will be administered along with a measure of executive function (Trail Making Test). Participants will be provided with self-reported questionnaires to be completed at each onsite visit. Blood samples will be taken once a year i.e. Month 0, 12, 24 and 36. The purpose of CPLS is to continue to build on the vital data and samples already kindly donated by participants screened for CPSS1. This will provide valuable information that will enhance understanding of the earliest stages of Alzheimer's disease before obvious symptoms start to appear. Importantly, the Investigators hope to identify predictive markers of disease, which will help doctors to select the right drugs, and develop other approaches like lifestyle guidance to prevent or delay Alzheimer's disease in the future. This study is sponsored by Imperial College London, led by the Principal Investigator Professor Lefkos Middleton and is funded by Gates Ventures.
The aim of the study is to prospectively evaluate factors and markers associated with varying cognitive performance and longitudinal trajectories in individuals with differing levels of brain amyloid burden cross-sectionally as defined by PET imaging or Aβ42 CSF measurements (at CPSS1 screening), over a period of up to 12 years from CPSS1 screening. Two C2N assays, i.e. the plasma Precivity AD2 and Multi-Tau assays, will be used at baseline and end -of-study, to assess the amyloid and tau cerebral burden, shown to have a comparable performance to PET and CSF. The former simultaneously quantifies specific plasma amyloid beta and tau peptide concentrations to calculate the Aβ42/40 Ratio and p-tau217/np-tau217(p-tau217 Ratio). The ratios are combined into a proprietary statistical algorithm to calculate the Amyloid Probability Score 2 (APS2), a numerical value ranging from 0-100, that determines whether a patient is Positive (has high likelihood) or Negative (has low likelihood) for the presence of abnormally high brain amyloid plaques by amyloid PET scan.A negative (0 - 47) is consistent with a negative amyloid PET scan; it reflects a low likelihood of brain amyloid plaques and is therefore not consistent with a neuropathological diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). A positive (48 - 100) is consistent with a positive amyloid PET scan; it reflects a high likelihood of brain amyloid plaques, one of the neuropathological findings of Alzheimer's disease (AD). The Multi-Tau assay measures the individual values and rations of phosphorylated and non- phosphorylated p/non p-tau 217, p/non p-t181 and p/non p- t205. The presence of high amyloid and/or tau cerebral burden alone does not establish a clinical diagnosis of AD and the APS2 and multi-tau results will be interpreted in conjunction with other patient information and will be clinically correlated.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
600
Imperial College London
London, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGChange from baseline in the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status (RBANS) Index scores
Raw scores are tallied for each of the 12 subtests and converted into five cognitive domain-specific Index scores (Immediate Memory, Delayed Memory, Language, Attention, Visuospatial Construction). Each Index score has a mean of 100 and an SD of 15, with a range of 40 to 160. Higher RBANS Index scores indicate better cognitive performance.
Time frame: 8.5 years
Change from baseline in the Preclinical Alzheimer Cognitive Composite (PACC) component scores
The raw score ranges for each test are as follows: Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE): 0-30; Logical Memory (Wechsler Memory Scale) - Immediate Recall: 0-25; Delayed Recall: 0-25; Digit Symbol Substitution Test (DSST): 0-93; Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test (FCSRT) - Immediate Recall: 0-48 and Delayed Recall: 0-16; and Category Fluency (alternatively known as semantic fluency): 0-40. Across all PACC components, higher scores indicate better cognitive performance.
Time frame: 8.5 years
Change from baseline in the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status (RBANS) Total Scale Score
RBANS raw scores are initially tallied for each of the 12 subtests and then converted into Index scores. These combined scores are further converted into a Total Scale Score, adjusted for age. The Total Scale Score is represented as a composite t-score with a mean of 100, a standard deviation (SD) of 15, and a range of 40-160. Higher RBANS Total scores indicate better cognitive performance.
Time frame: 8.5 years
Change from baseline in the Preclinical Alzheimer Cognitive Composite (PACC) composite score
Each component score will be transformed into a z-score. These z-scores will then be summed to form the PACC composite score. There is no fixed minimum or maximum for z-scores: a z-score of 0 represents average performance compared to a reference group; a negative z-score indicates below-average performance; and a positive z-score indicates above-average performance. Higher PACC composite scores indicate better cognitive performance.
Time frame: 8.5 years
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