Awardee OrganizationBOSTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CAMPUS
Description
Abstract Text
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
Effective drug treatment for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) may well be on the horizon. While the amyloid-tau-
neurodegeneration (A/T/N) signature is recommended for the diagnosis of AD, it is not definitive for clinical
expression. Recent advance in digital technology provides a potentially low-cost and scalable approach to
continuous cognitive assessment. Digital biomarkers will also make relevant, in real time, disease prevention
opportunities by monitoring and reporting changes in modifiable disease risk behaviors. The objective of our
proposal is to develop a digital cognitive health resource based on the Boston University Alzheimer’s Disease
Research Center (BU ADRC). The project is built upon the success of our initial precision brain health platform
for continuous cognitive assessment. We will leverage the BU ADRC cohort and its extensive and on-going
collection of longitudinal vascular risk factors, AD PET, CSF and plasma biomarkers, adjudicated dementia
subtype diagnoses and other clinical data, cognitive measures obtained from traditional paper-pencil
neuropsychological tests and neuroanatomic regions of interest extracted from brain MRI scans. We will add to
this annual data collection effort concomitant collection of longitudinal digital cognitive phenotypes via digital
recorder, digital pen, and smartphone applications. Our project includes three specific aims: 1) Collect the
digital cognitive metrics (dCog) and characterize those at high AD risk (A/T/N positive; A/T/N+) compared to
those at low AD risk (A/T/N negative, A/T/N-); 2) Assess the relationship of dCog phenotypes with vascular risk
factors and neuroanatomic measures; and 3) Build machine learning models from dCog phenotypes in
isolation and in combination with vascular risk factors and brain imaging/blood-based biomarkers to predict
cognitive health. The outlined strategy will identify and validate novel digital cognitive biomarkers and provide
new avenues for better diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of AD.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PROJECT NARRATIVE
Effective drug treatment for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) may well be on the horizon. The objective of our
proposal is to develop a digital health resource for continuous cognitive assessment in a well-characterized
cohort to identify and validate novel digital cognitive measures and develop new models for cognitive health to
aid early detection, treatment, and prevention of AD.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AchievementAlzheimer disease preventionAlzheimer's DiseaseAlzheimer's disease diagnosisAlzheimer's disease related dementiaAlzheimer's disease riskAlzheimer’s disease biomarkerAmyloidAutopsyBiologicalBiological MarkersBloodBlood VesselsBostonBrainBrain imagingCerebrospinal FluidCessation of lifeClinicalClinical DataCognitiveCollectionDataData CollectionDementiaDetectionDevicesDiagnosisDigital biomarkerDiseaseEarly DiagnosisFrequenciesHealthHealth ResourcesHealth TechnologyHippocampusIndividualInternet of ThingsInterventionLife Cycle StagesMRI ScansMeasuresMediationMethodsModelingMonitorNerve DegenerationNeuroanatomyNeuropsychological TestsOnset of illnessPaperParticipantPatientsPharmacotherapyPhenotypePlasmaPositron-Emission TomographyPredispositionRecommendationReportingResearchRiskRisk BehaviorsStandardizationStructureSymptomsThickTimeUnited States Food and Drug AdministrationUniversitiesVascular DiseasesWhite Matter Hyperintensityadjudicationblood-based biomarkerbrain healthbrain magnetic resonance imagingbrain volumeclinical centercognitive testingcohortcostdata resourcedementia riskdigitaldigital datadigital healthdigital modelsdigital phenotypingdigital technologydisorder preventiondisorder riskinterestmachine learning modelneurofilamentneuropathologynovelphase III trialpre-clinical assessmentsensorsmartphone applicationsuccesstau Proteinsvascular risk factor
No Sub Projects information available for 1R01AG083735-01A1
Publications
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Outcomes
The Project Outcomes shown here are displayed verbatim as submitted by the Principal Investigator (PI) for this award. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed are those of the PI and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institutes of Health. NIH has not endorsed the content below.
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