The University of Washington, Group Health Cooperative Alzheimer's
Disease patient Registry (ADPR) is a model incident case registry for
dementia and Alzheimer~s disease developed in 1986 in response to a
National Institute of Aging request for proposals. This application
is a competing continuation of the ADPR. The application proposes to
continue follow-up of cases enrolled between January 1987 and may
1996, during which approximately 1,000 patients were enrolled. These
cases have been and will continue to be part of ongoing studies of
diagnostic markers, natural history and have served as sources of
cases for other investigators at the University of Washington and
throughout the country.
During the last funding cycle, we established a cohort of 2,58
persons over age 65 from the Group Health enrollment. Based on
biennial follow-up examinations, we are detecting all incident cases
of Alzheimer~s disease and related dementias from this cohort. This
application proposes to continue our follow-up and maintenance of
this cohort. Our goal is to estimate age-group specific incident
rates of Alzheimer~s disease and related dementias and to test
environmental and genetic risk factors which have been previously
identified in case-control studies. In addition, the methods of the
cohort study have been standardized to companion cross-cultural
studies of Japanese-Americans in Honolulu and Seattle, and Japanese
in Hiroshima. Since these studies have similar design and data
collection protocols, we propose to compare our results wit the
results from these affiliated cross-cultural studies, comparing
incidence rates, distribution of dementia subtypes, and distribution
of risk factors in different sites. The cohort study design affords
the opportunity to reduce bias in measurement of exposure and allows
us to obtain truly incident dementia cases. The parallel cross-
cultural studies offer a unique opportunity to take advantage of the
natural variation in environmental exposures that occurs with
population migration. Migration studies have traditionally been
helpful in determining whether there are modifiable risk factors for
prevention of important chronic diseases.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
Alzheimer's disease brain disorder diagnosis clinical research disease /disorder proneness /risk drug adverse effect human population genetics human subject longitudinal human study mental health epidemiology mental health information system neuropsychological tests neurotoxins pathologic process patient /disease registry racial /ethnic difference
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