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About
Each year, millions of people are exposed to repetitive head impacts (RHI) through contact sports. RHI can result in concussions and asymptomatic non-concussions to confer risk for Alzheimer's disease (AD) and related dementias (ADRD) including chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). Presently, a diagnosis of CTE can only be rendered at autopsy and it has been neuropathological diagnosed in several hundreds of American football players particularly those who played at elite levels (college and professional). The ability to make an accurate diagnosis of CTE is needed to facilitate research on risk factors, mechanisms, prevention, and treatment.
In 2015, the investigators were awarded a NINDS funded 7-year U01 known as the DIAGNOSE CTE Research Project (NCT02798185) designed to develop biomarkers, characterize the clinical presentation, and examine genetic and RHI risk factors for CTE. This current 5-year NIH funded multicenter study DIAGNOSE CTE Research Project-II will build on and extend those findings.
Full description
The aims of the DIAGNOSE CTE Research Project-II are to:
The investigators hypothesize that TES has unique clinical and biomarker profiles, and RHI and non-RHI risk factors influence the development of TES.
There will be 3 study groups:
Participants will complete a single visit, including clinical exams, social determinants of health (SDOH) measures, MRI, blood draw, and tau PET, at 1 of 5 P30 AD Research Centers (ADRCs): Boston University (BU), University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), Arizona/Banner Alzheimer's Institute (BAI), University of Florida (1Florida), and University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (South Texas).
The Retention Cohort will have 18F-Flortaucipir (18F-AV-1451, Tauvid (FTP)) PET to study its longitudinal value. The Expansion Cohort will have 18F-MK-6240 (MK-6240) PET to build on the investigators' preliminary data. A subset of the Retention Cohort (n=20) will have FTP and MK-6240 for tracer comparison. Blood will be analyzed for 6 p-tau epitopes, Aβ40/42, neuroinflammation, and WM injury. DIAGNOSE-I participants were asked to pledge to donate their brain.
This study will permit continued brain donation and clinical-pathological validation studies. Results will provide insight into the detection, diagnosis, and prognosis for people living with CTE, paving the way for treatment trials.
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Inclusion criteria
Former college or professional football players (n=225) will include those retained from DIAGNOSE-I (n=150) and newly recruited (n=75). Criteria will include
Control (n=75) will include those retained from DIAGNOSE-I (n=50) and newly recruited (n=25). Inclusion criteria for control include:
AD-CI (n=50) will come from the local ADRCs where Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) and amyloid biomarker status are known for most participants being followed annually. Inclusion criteria include:
Tracer comparison sub-sample: 20 professional football players from DIAGNOSE-I will have FTP and MK-6240 tau PET (done at the same site, scanner). The 20 participants at highest risk for having CTE pathology will be selected based on the following:
For newly recruited, those individuals who meet any of the following criteria are not eligible for enrollment as study participants.
Exclusion criteria
For all participants (retention and expansion), the following will be exclusionary for participating in PET scan activities:
350 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Michael Alosco, PhD; Kelsey Goostrey, MPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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