Mez Jesse, Solomon Todd M, Daneshvar Daniel H, Murphy Lauren, Kiernan Patrick T, Montenigro Philip H, Kriegel Joshua, Abdolmohammadi Bobak, Fry Brian, Babcock Katharine J, Adams Jason W, Bourlas Alexandra P, Papadopoulos Zachary, McHale Lisa, Ardaugh Brent M, Martin Brett R, Dixon Diane, Nowinski Christopher J, Chaisson Christine, Alvarez Victor E, Tripodis Yorghos, Stein Thor D, Goldstein Lee E, Katz Douglas I, Kowall Neil W, Cantu Robert C, Stern Robert A, McKee Ann C
Alzheimer's Disease Center, Boston University School of Medicine, 72 East Concord Street, B-7800, Boston, MA, 02118, USA.
Department of Neurology, Boston University School of Medicine, 72 East Concord Street, Boston, MA, 02118, USA.
Alzheimers Res Ther. 2015 Oct 12;7(1):62. doi: 10.1186/s13195-015-0148-8.
Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is a progressive neurodegeneration associated with repetitive head impacts. Understanding Neurologic Injury and Traumatic Encephalopathy (UNITE) is a U01 project recently funded by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering. The goal of the UNITE project is to examine the neuropathology and clinical presentation of brain donors designated as "at risk" for the development of CTE based on prior athletic or military exposure. Here, we present the rationale and methodology for UNITE.
Over the course of 4 years, we will analyze the brains and spinal cords of 300 deceased subjects who had a history of repetitive head impacts sustained during participation in contact sports at the professional or collegiate level or during military service. Clinical data are collected through medical record review and retrospective structured and unstructured family interviews conducted by a behavioral neurologist or neuropsychologist. Blinded to the clinical data, a neuropathologist conducts a comprehensive assessment for neurodegenerative disease, including CTE, using published criteria. At a clinicopathological conference, a panel of physicians and neuropsychologists, blinded to the neuropathological data, reaches a clinical consensus diagnosis using published criteria, including proposed clinical research criteria for CTE.
We will investigate the validity of these clinical criteria and sources of error by using recently validated neuropathological criteria as a gold standard for CTE diagnosis. We also will use statistical modeling to identify diagnostic features that best predict CTE pathology.
The UNITE study is a novel and methodologically rigorous means of assessing clinicopathological correlation in CTE. Our findings will be critical for developing future iterations of CTE clinical diagnostic criteria.
慢性创伤性脑病(CTE)是一种与重复性头部撞击相关的进行性神经退行性疾病。了解神经损伤与创伤性脑病(UNITE)是一项由美国国立神经疾病和中风研究所以及国立生物医学成像和生物工程研究所近期资助的U01项目。UNITE项目的目标是研究那些基于既往运动或军事经历而被认定有CTE发病“风险”的脑捐献者的神经病理学和临床表现。在此,我们介绍UNITE项目的基本原理和方法。
在4年的时间里,我们将分析300名已故受试者的大脑和脊髓,这些受试者在职业或大学水平的接触性运动中或服役期间有重复性头部撞击史。临床数据通过病历审查以及由行为神经学家或神经心理学家进行的回顾性结构化和非结构化家庭访谈收集。在对临床数据不知情的情况下,神经病理学家使用已发表的标准对包括CTE在内的神经退行性疾病进行全面评估。在一次临床病理讨论会上,一组对神经病理学数据不知情的医生和神经心理学家使用已发表的标准,包括CTE的拟议临床研究标准,达成临床共识诊断。
我们将使用最近验证的神经病理学标准作为CTE诊断的金标准,研究这些临床标准的有效性和误差来源。我们还将使用统计模型来识别最能预测CTE病理的诊断特征。
UNITE研究是一种评估CTE临床病理相关性新颖且方法严谨的手段。我们的研究结果对于制定CTE临床诊断标准的未来版本至关重要。