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NCT06322121

Vascular Aspects in Dementia: Part 2

Sponsor: Leiden University Medical Center

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), a common cerebrovascular small vessel disease (SVD), is a frequently (98%) found co-morbidity at autopsy in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Current in vivo hallmarks of CAA represent changes relatively late in the disease process and leaves CAA in AD often undetected. Recently, it was shown that decreased vascular reactivity (VR) measured with blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) MRI, after visual stimulus, is an early CAA marker. With BOLD-MRI to detect decreased VR in different stages of AD, it was shown that increasing stages of AD associate with decreasing VR independent of age, classic SVD markers and atrophy. Moreover, VR is associated with cognitive deficits. Therefore, cross-sectional data indicate that decreased VR is an important co-morbidity already in early stages of AD with an independent effect on disease severity. In this respect, the study aim is to determine the natural course of the decrease of VR in both controls and (early stage) AD patients to monitor AD disease progression. This is an essential step to aid in the development and application of effective treatment as it is expected that CAA can cause/worsen AD pathology.

Official title: Clarifying the Vascular Aspects of Dementia; Natural History Study

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

50 Years - 90 Years

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

120

Start Date

2023-09-04

Completion Date

2026-09

Last Updated

2025-09-15

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Conditions

Interventions

OTHER

MRI

Assessment of vascular reactivity and CAA/SVD MRI markers

Locations (1)

Leids Universitair Medisch Centrum

Leiden, Netherlands