|
The Evaluation and Follow-up of Individuals with Memory Disorder Clinical Trials Data presented on Clinical Trials Search is not meant to be a substitute for qualified health advice, visits or treatment with a real mD. We are not doctors. Always consult your doctor about The Evaluation and Follow-up of Individuals with Memory Disorder conditions. Clinical Trials Search.org is a site devoted to listing clinical research studies in human subjects. The Evaluation and Follow-up of Individuals with Memory Disorder Clinical research trials and The Evaluation and Follow-up of Individuals with Memory Disorder healthcare trials happen in many of places across the United States. A clinical trial or clinical study is a research project with human volunteer subjects. Clinical drug trials and pharmaceutical clinical trials generally assess the effectivity of new drugs. The purpose of the studies / projects is to solve particular human medical questions. Clinical trials are a popular way for doctors, government agencies, and private sector companies to discover cures for all varieties of conditions, such as The Evaluation and Follow-up of Individuals with Memory Disorder. The Evaluation and Follow-up of Individuals with Memory Disorder Clinical Trials and other clinical trials allow volunteers to have health treatment alternatives before they are available to the masses. Some times the human subjects obtain treatment for without cost, and sometimes they are compensated for their time. Occasionally there is a cost for a The Evaluation and Follow-up of Individuals with Memory Disorder clinical trial. Test subjects oftentimes receive the most effective healthcare possible for their The Evaluation and Follow-up of Individuals with Memory Disorder condition. Dangers are a reality, however, and may include extra or frequent physician visits, healthcare dangers (possibly life-jeopardising), and/or the treatment being uneffective. Trials are federally governed with rigorous guidelines to protect clinical trials patients.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Home > "T" Clinical Trials Conditions > The Evaluation and Follow-up of Individuals with Memory Disorder The Evaluation and Follow-up of Individuals with Memory Disorder
The Evaluation and Follow-up of Individuals with Memory Disorder
For Condition: Alzheimer's Disease,Dementia,Healthy,Memory Disorder
Status: Recruiting
Sponsor(s): National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) ,
Synopsis: The purpose of this study is to evaluate people with mild memory problems, those with dementia, those at risk for developing Alzheimer's disease (AD), and healthy volunteers to identify markers of AD before the changes that occur with the disease begin. The origin and markers of progression for Alzheimer's disease (AD) are relatively obscure. Despite increased understanding of the underlying biology of AD, its clinical diagnosis is still made only after progressive cognitive decline; definitive diagnosis is confirmed at autopsy. This study will examine biomarker changes over time in a distinct cohort of people with an increased risk of developing AD. The study will also identify and track biological changes that occur with progressive dementia and compare those changes to the known cognitive and emotional disturbances that characterize AD. Individuals with a first-degree relative with AD will be recruited into an at-risk cohort. They will be followed and compared to a group of healthy volunteers for a minimum of 8 years.
Details: The temporal origin of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and markers of progression of this disease process are relatively obscure. Despite outstanding advances in the understanding of the underlying biology of AD, the clinical diagnosis is still made by consensus following progressive cognitive deterioration and confirmed only at autopsy. The protocol will serve two functions. First, we will evaluate and longitudinally follow a cohort of first-degree relatives of AD subjects who are currently normal but are at increased risk of developing AD sometime in the future. This cohort will be compared to a group of normal controls along multiple behavioral, cognitive, motor function, genetic and biologic parameters for a minimum of eight years. While differential rates of conversion to AD might eventually be expected based on family history and other fixed variables (i.e., APO E status), this study is not powered to simply be a study of conversion to AD. Rather, it is a study of biomarker change over time in a distinct cohort of people with increased risk of developing AD. Conversion to a clinical diagnosis of AD is only one of the variables; others will include cognitive testing, neuroimaging, sensitivity to challenge studies, genetic markers, assessment of functional capacities and cerebrospinal fluid measures which may ultimately function as disease surrogates. As part of this at risk cohort, we will recruit and longitudinally follow a series of pre-symptomatic and symptomatic subjects with known genetic mutations (presenilin 1, presenilin 2, or APP). Second, we will follow a large cohort of dementia subjects themselves for whom the diagnosis is either AD or some other related dementia. The purpose of this second part of the follow-up study is to identify and track those biologic changes that occur with progressive illness and, furthermore, to relate those changes to the known cognitive and emotional disturbances which characterize AD. These two longitudinal cohorts each reflect a separate aspect of the transition to and through AD. As a result, the study is both a screening protocol and a natural history protocol. It will address a series of important clinical and biological questions among a wide range of normal and diseased individuals and should serve as a basis for the development of biologic markers in AD that could be used for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes in the future. A long-term goal of this protocol to identify markers and eventually individual people who are at increased risk of developing AD before the typical cognitive changes of AD become manifest and to offer treatments that might delay or prevent the onset of AD. In pursuit of that goal, we will also study the clinical medications taken by our subjects to see if they influence the course of AD.
Eligibility:
Study Type: Observational, Natural History
Minimum Age/Maximum Age: /
Genders: Both
Protocol Entry Criteria: INCLUSION AND EXCLUSION CRITERIA: DEMENTIA PATIENTS: Dementia of the Alzheimer type will be defined by a gradual onset with a continuing cognitive decline not due to other central nervous system conditions that cause progressive deficits in memory. The cognitive decline must include a memory impairment but must also be accompanied by at least one other cognitive disturbance such as aphasia, apraxia, agnosia, or a disturbance in executive functioning. The deficits must cause significant impairments in social or occupational performance and represent a decline in function. Longitudinal subjects will be excluded from specific aspects of the study if they have contraindications to any of the procedures involved as specified in the Hazards and Precautions section. Furthermore, subjects will be excluded if they are not able or willing to assign durable power of attorney (DPA) to an appropriate person. MILD COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT (MCI): Is defined operationally as evidence of cognitive difficulty, including memory problems which are significant to generate a worry for the individual or surrounding family members but not yet sufficient to elicit the diagnosis of possible Alzheimer's disease when evaluated by a physician. As in the Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study, these subjects will have a memory complaint and at least one abnormal memory function, but they will still fall within normal limits globally. AT RISK INDIVIDUALS: At risk individuals will be defined by one of the following criteria: (a) having a presumptive diagnosis of AD in one or more of their first-degree relatives; or (b) belonging to a family with a known or presumed genetic mutation for AD; and (c) testing within the normal range on a battery of cognitive tests at the time of baseline evaluation. NORMAL CONTROLS: They will not have a positive family history of dementia in their first-degree relatives, and they will test within the normal range on the battery of cognitive tests listed previously.
Total Enrollment: 750
Location and Contact Information:
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) *Recruiting*
Bethesda, Maryland, 20892
United States
Recruiting P. Sunderland III 3014960948
Additional Information:
Study ID Numbers: 950096; 95-M-0096
Study Start Date: March 21, 1995
Record last reviewed: February 27, 2004
Additional information available at: clinicaltrials.gov
Clinicaltrials.gov Reference link: NCT00001480
Other Dementia Studies:
1. Study of the Response of Human Small Blood Vessels
2. Comparison of Externally and Self-Initiated Movements
3. Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Brain in Emotional Processing
4. Magnetic Resonance Imaging at Different Levels of Magnetic Intensity
5. Cause of Pigment Dispersion Syndrome
Related Studies:
Other Dementia Clinical Trials
Other Maryland Clinical Trials
Other Bethesda Clinical Trials
The Evaluation and Follow-up of Individuals with Memory Disorder
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|