Extreme weather-related events and environmental exposures in the risk for Alzheimer's disease and related dementias
极端天气相关事件和环境暴露会增加阿尔茨海默病和相关痴呆症的风险
基本信息
- 批准号:10449041
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 76.81万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2022
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2022-06-15 至 2027-05-31
- 项目状态:未结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:AddressAffectAfrican American populationAgeAgingAirAir PollutionAlzheimer&aposs disease related dementiaAlzheimer&aposs disease riskAmericanAmyloidBirthBrainCaliberCaliforniaCardiovascular DiseasesChemicalsCognitionCognitiveCohort StudiesComputerized Medical RecordDataDevelopmentDroughtsElderlyEnvironmentEnvironmental ExposureEnvironmental PollutionEnvironmental Risk FactorEthnic OriginEthnic groupEtiologyEventExposure toFrequenciesFundingGoalsImpaired cognitionIncidenceIndividualInterventionLeadLifeLife ExperienceLinkLiteratureLongevityMagnetic Resonance ImagingMalignant NeoplasmsMeasuresMercuryMethodologyModernizationNational Institute on AgingNeurocognitiveNeuropsychological TestsNeurotoxinsOlder PopulationOutcomeOutcome StudyParticulateParticulate MatterPatternPersonsPopulationPopulation HeterogeneityPositron-Emission TomographyPrecision HealthPreventionPublic HealthRaceRecommendationRecording of previous eventsResearchRiskRisk FactorsRoleSamplingSeveritiesStrategic PlanningStrokeTemperatureTestingTimeUltrafineUnited States National Institutes of HealthWildfireadvanced diseaseaging brainbehavior measurementcardiovascular risk factorclimate changeclinical examinationcognitive functioncohortdementia riskdisorder preventionenvironmental chemicalextreme heatextreme weatherfine particleshealth datahealthy agingimaging biomarkerimprovedmodifiable riskmultidimensional dataneuroimagingneuroimaging markerpreventpsychosocialracial and ethnicstudy populationsymposiumtrendultrafine particle
项目摘要
PROJECT SUMMARY
The 2018 National Institute on Aging AD Research Summit recommendation of “Understanding the
Impact of the Environment to Advance Disease Prevention” as a key strategic plan to treat and
prevent Alzheimer's Disease and related dementias (ADRD) by 2025. Exposure to extreme
weather-related events, air pollution, and environmental contaminants are pervasive, yet little is
known about their relationships with ADRD, especially among a diverse older population. The
proposed study addresses critical gaps in the literature by linking residential history on a diverse
sample of over 3,379 individuals from 3 ongoing NIH-funded cohort studies (Kaiser Healthy Aging
and Diverse Life Experiences (KHANDLE, n=1712, mean age 76.2, 71% non- White), the Study of
Healthy Aging in African-Americans (STAR, n=764, mean age 68.4, 100% non-White) andLife After
90 (LA 90, n=903, mean age 92.7, 72% non-White)) to newly collected data on environmental
exposures and will generate new granular, comprehensive, lifecourse measures of environmental
exposures that will be used to examine their association with ADRD. All studies conduct
harmonized neurocognitive assessments, clinical exams and neuroimaging, collect information on
lifecourse risk factors, and are linked to health data (1960s-1990s) and electronic medical records
(1996-present). Residential history at seven time points is collected (birth-current), and will be
geocoded and linked to historic exposure data. The overall objective of this studyis to investigate
exposure to extreme weather-related events, air pollution, and toxic environmental contaminants on
cognitive function, ADRD, and neuroimaging biomarker in diverse aging populations. In a unique
and unprecedented opportunity to comprehensively evaluate environmental exposures on late-life
brainoutcomes, this study will address the following among 3,379 diverse Northern California
residents: (1) Test the associations between exposure to extreme weather-related events (extreme
heat, drought, wildfire) on neuroimaging markers, cognitive decline, and ADRD; (2) Determine the
associations between exposure to ambient particulate air pollution (fine and ultrafine particulate
matter (PM2.5, PM0.1)) on neuroimaging markers, cognitive decline, and ADRD; and (3) Assess the
relationships between exposure to toxic environmental contaminants (lead, mercury) on
neuroimaging markers, cognitive decline, and ADRD. Leveraging cumulative and time-dependent
exposure to these environmental factors will illuminate lifecourse period in which exposureto these
environmental factors is especially salient to healthy brain aging. Findings from this study have the
potential to uncover new risk factors for ADRD and cognitive decline, and provide targets of ADRD
interventionthat would improve healthy brain aging for people of all racial/ethnic groups.
项目概要
2018年美国国家老龄化研究所AD研究峰会推荐《Understanding the
环境对促进疾病预防的影响”作为治疗和预防疾病的关键战略计划
到 2025 年预防阿尔茨海默氏病和相关痴呆症 (ADRD)。
与天气相关的事件、空气污染和环境污染物普遍存在,但很少有
了解他们与 ADRD 的关系,尤其是在不同的老年人群中。
拟议的研究通过将不同的居住历史联系起来,解决了文献中的关键空白
来自 NIH 资助的 3 项正在进行的队列研究(Kaiser Healthy Aging
和多样化的生活经历(KHANDLE,n=1712,平均年龄 76.2,71% 非白人),研究
非裔美国人的健康老龄化(STAR,n=764,平均年龄 68.4,100% 非白人)和之后的生活
90(洛杉矶 90,n=903,平均年龄 92.7,72% 非白人))到新收集的环境数据
并将产生新的细化、全面、生命周期的环境衡量标准
所有研究都将用于检查其与 ADRD 的关联。
协调一致的神经认知评估、临床检查和神经影像学,收集有关
生命全程风险因素,并与健康数据(1960 年代至 1990 年代)和电子病历相关
(1996年至今)收集七个时间点的居住史(出生至今),并将被记录。
地理编码并与历史暴露数据相关联本研究的总体目标是进行调查。
暴露于极端天气相关事件、空气污染和有毒环境污染物
不同老龄人群中的认知功能、ADRD 和神经影像生物标志物。
以及全面评估晚年环境暴露的前所未有的机会
脑结果,这项研究将解决 3,379 名不同的北加州人的以下问题
居民:(1)测试暴露于极端天气相关事件(extreme
(2) 确定
暴露于环境颗粒物空气污染(细颗粒物和超细颗粒物)之间的关联
物质(PM2.5、PM0.1))对神经影像标记物、认知能力下降和 ADRD 的影响;以及 (3) 评估
接触有毒环境污染物(铅、汞)与
神经影像标记物、认知能力下降和 ADRD。
暴露于这些环境因素将阐明暴露于这些环境因素的生命周期
这项研究的结果表明,环境因素对大脑的健康老化尤为重要。
有可能发现 ADRD 和认知能力下降的新风险因素,并提供 ADRD 目标
干预措施将改善所有种族/族裔群体的健康大脑老化。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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Kathryn C Conlon其他文献
Daily Fine Resolution Estimates of the Influence of Wildfires on Fine Particulate Matter in California, 2011–2020
2011-2020 年加利福尼亚州野火对细颗粒物影响的每日精细分辨率估计
- DOI:
- 发表时间:
2024 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:2.9
- 作者:
Caitlin G. Jones;Kathryn C Conlon;M. Al;Jason Vargo - 通讯作者:
Jason Vargo
Kathryn C Conlon的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Kathryn C Conlon', 18)}}的其他基金
Extreme weather-related events and environmental exposures in the risk for Alzheimer's disease and related dementias
极端天气相关事件和环境暴露会增加阿尔茨海默病和相关痴呆症的风险
- 批准号:
10634720 - 财政年份:2022
- 资助金额:
$ 76.81万 - 项目类别:
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