Alzheimer’s disease therapeutic trials: EU/US task force report on recruitment, retention, and methodology

While we may not be able to find a cure for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in the near future, several drugs presently in trials have shown promise as possible modifiers of disease progression. However, we may not be able to demonstrate efficacy due to issues of recruitment, retention, site-to-site variab...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of nutrition, health & aging health & aging, 2012-04, Vol.16 (4), p.339-345
Hauptverfasser: Vellas, B, Hampel, H, Rouge-Bugat, M. E, Grundman, M, Andrieu, S, Abu-Shakra, S, Bateman, R, Berman, R, Black, R, Carrillo, M, Donohue, M, Mintun, M, Morris, J, Petersen, R, Thomas, R. G, Suhy, J, Schneider, L, Seely, L, Tariot, P, Touchon, J, Weiner, M, Sampaio, C, Aisen, P
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container_end_page 345
container_issue 4
container_start_page 339
container_title The Journal of nutrition, health & aging
container_volume 16
creator Vellas, B
Hampel, H
Rouge-Bugat, M. E
Grundman, M
Andrieu, S
Abu-Shakra, S
Bateman, R
Berman, R
Black, R
Carrillo, M
Donohue, M
Mintun, M
Morris, J
Petersen, R
Thomas, R. G
Suhy, J
Schneider, L
Seely, L
Tariot, P
Touchon, J
Weiner, M
Sampaio, C
Aisen, P
description While we may not be able to find a cure for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in the near future, several drugs presently in trials have shown promise as possible modifiers of disease progression. However, we may not be able to demonstrate efficacy due to issues of recruitment, retention, site-to-site variability, and other methodological issues. It is thus incumbent on the scientific community to find solutions to these problems, particularly as the field moves toward preventing illness or treating the disease in its prodromal stages, where these methodological issues will become even more critical. We need to better understand why participants agree or refuse to enter drag trials, and why both primary care physicians and Alzheimer’s specialists agree or refuse to involve their patients. We also need to quantify the impact of requiring imaging studies, extensive questionnaires, cognitive testing, and lumbar punctures on recruitment and retention. With these concerns in mind, an international task force meeting of experts from academia and industry in the United States, European Union, and Japan in San Diego, California on November 2, 2011 to focus on recruitment, retention and other methodological issues related to clinical trials for AD. Based on the recommendations of this Task force meeting, this Perspectives article critically reflects on the most critical and timely methodological issues related to recruitment and retention in prevention and therapeutic trials in AD, which are paralleled by a paradigm shift in the diagnostic conceptualization of this disease, as reflected by recently new proposed diagnostic criteria involving preclinical stages of the disease.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s12603-012-0044-x
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It is thus incumbent on the scientific community to find solutions to these problems, particularly as the field moves toward preventing illness or treating the disease in its prodromal stages, where these methodological issues will become even more critical. We need to better understand why participants agree or refuse to enter drag trials, and why both primary care physicians and Alzheimer’s specialists agree or refuse to involve their patients. We also need to quantify the impact of requiring imaging studies, extensive questionnaires, cognitive testing, and lumbar punctures on recruitment and retention. With these concerns in mind, an international task force meeting of experts from academia and industry in the United States, European Union, and Japan in San Diego, California on November 2, 2011 to focus on recruitment, retention and other methodological issues related to clinical trials for AD. 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However, we may not be able to demonstrate efficacy due to issues of recruitment, retention, site-to-site variability, and other methodological issues. It is thus incumbent on the scientific community to find solutions to these problems, particularly as the field moves toward preventing illness or treating the disease in its prodromal stages, where these methodological issues will become even more critical. We need to better understand why participants agree or refuse to enter drag trials, and why both primary care physicians and Alzheimer’s specialists agree or refuse to involve their patients. We also need to quantify the impact of requiring imaging studies, extensive questionnaires, cognitive testing, and lumbar punctures on recruitment and retention. 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source MEDLINE; Alma/SFX Local Collection; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Adult and adolescent clinical studies
Aging
Alzheimer disease
Alzheimer Disease - diagnosis
Alzheimer Disease - drug therapy
Alzheimer Disease - prevention & control
Alzheimer's disease
Biological and medical sciences
Biomarkers
Biomarkers - analysis
California
Classification schemes
Clinical trials
Clinical Trials as Topic
cognition
Degenerative and inherited degenerative diseases of the nervous system. Leukodystrophies. Prion diseases
Dementia
disease course
disease diagnosis
Disease prevention
Disease Progression
drugs
European Union
experts
Feeding. Feeding behavior
Follow-Up Studies
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Geriatrics/Gerontology
Humans
industry
International Cooperation
Japan
JNHA: Clinical Trials and Aging
Medical sciences
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Multicenter Studies as Topic
Neuroimaging - methods
Neurology
Neurosciences
Nutrition
Organic mental disorders. Neuropsychology
Patient Selection
patients
physicians
Primary Care Medicine
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Quality of Life Research
questionnaires
recruitment
Retention
Surveys and Questionnaires
Task forces
therapeutics
United States
Vertebrates: anatomy and physiology, studies on body, several organs or systems
Working groups
title Alzheimer’s disease therapeutic trials: EU/US task force report on recruitment, retention, and methodology
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