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Landmark 69-year study to provide window into dementia

14 July 2015

A landmark study that has been following a group of people since their birth in the same week in March 1946 is now turning its focus to the risk factors and early signs of dementia.

A multi-disciplinary team of researchers led by Dr Jonathan Schott and Professor Nick Fox based at the Dementia Research Centre, UCL Institute of Neurology and Professor Marcus Richards at the MRC Unit for Lifelong Health and Ageing at UCL is studying 500 members of the unique MRC National Survey of Health and Development as volunteers approach their 70th birthday, to gain crucial insight into Alzheimer’s and other dementias.

The study is funded by Alzheimer’s Research UK, Iceland Foods Charitable Foundation, the Medical Research Council (MRC) Dementias Platform UK and the Wolfson Foundation.

Dementia is one of the largest health challenges that our generation faces but there is still a lot left to understand about how diseases like Alzheimer’s develop in the early stages and what events during a person’s life may contribute to their risk of dementia. There are frustratingly few options available to help people with dementia, but by understanding the early stages of Alzheimer’s and other dementias and what may be triggering these changes, we stand the best chance of making progress. Dr Jonathan Schott, Dementia Research Centre, UCL Institute of Neurology, co-leader of the study

The MRC National Survey of Health and Development initially tracked 5,362 people since their birth in 1946, and 2,800 remain under active follow-up. Originally set up to explore the impact of maternity care on child health and development after World War Two, the unique cohort has contributed to almost seven decades of pioneering research shedding light on infant development, educational attainment and cognitive function in midlife.As volunteers now approach later life, the UCL team is using multi-modal MRI and amyloid PET brain scanning along with a wide array of cognitive and neurological tests to gain a window into what’s happening in the brains of 500 of the volunteers as they age.

The study hopes to shed more light on how lifetime experiences interact with genetics to determine an individual’s risk for developing for dementia as well as looking for some of the earliest signs of diseases like Alzheimer’s – the most common cause of dementia. This in turn will inform how best to design clinical trials of therapies aiming to prevent the onset of cognitive decline in at risk individuals.

By combining sophisticated brain scanning techniques with sensitive memory testing we hope to gain insights into the brain changes occurring as part of healthy ageing and how these differ from very early Alzheimer’s disease. Using the decades of detailed medical and life history from these 500 individuals we hope to learn more about how health, environmental factors and genetics combine to impact on an individual’s risk of developing dementia. There is so much potential to uncover key early changes in the brain in these diseases that could make a huge difference to clinical trials, allowing us to test potential new treatments on the right people at the right time to see what really works. Dr Jonathan Schott

The first volunteers have begun to have their first brain scans as part of the study and will also provide blood, urine and DNA samples. This will allow the research team to look for signatures in blood and urine that could provide early indicators of Alzheimer’s and other dementias, as well as making these samples available for analysis by other research teams looking to develop innovative ways to detect these diseases at a very early stage. The current funding will allow the team to follow the volunteers for two years but the team already hopes to expand their work to map the genetics of individuals as well as continuing to monitor them for many years to build a complete picture of their health and brain function in later life.

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Image: Professor Nick Fox (left) and Dr Jon Schott (right)