Alzheimers Dement. 2016 Dec;12(12):1235-1249. doi: 10.1016/j.jalz.2016.06.004. Epub 2016 Aug 1.
Dementia is a global problem and major target for health care providers. Although up to 45% of cases are primarily or partly due to cerebrovascular disease, little is known of these mechanisms or treatments because most dementia research still focuses on pure Alzheimer's disease. An improved understanding of the vascular contributions to neurodegeneration and dementia, particularly by small vessel disease, is hampered by imprecise data, including the incidence and prevalence of symptomatic and clinically "silent" cerebrovascular disease, long-term outcomes (cognitive, stroke, or functional), and risk factors. New large collaborative studies with long follow-up are expensive and time consuming, yet substantial data to advance the field are available. In an initiative funded by the Joint Programme for Neurodegenerative Disease Research, 55 international experts surveyed and assessed available data, starting with European cohorts, to promote data sharing to advance understanding of how vascular disease affects brain structure and function, optimize methods for cerebrovascular disease in neurodegeneration research, and focus future research on gaps in knowledge. Here, we summarize the results and recommendations from this initiative. We identified data from over 90 studies, including over 660,000 participants, many being additional to neurodegeneration data initiatives. The enthusiastic response means that cohorts from North America, Australasia, and the Asia Pacific Region are included, creating a truly global, collaborative, data sharing platform, linked to major national dementia initiatives. Furthermore, the revised World Health Organization International Classification of Diseases version 11 should facilitate recognition of vascular-related brain damage by creating one category for all cerebrovascular disease presentations and thus accelerate identification of targets for dementia prevention.
痴呆症是一个全球性问题,也是医疗保健提供者的主要目标。尽管高达45%的病例主要或部分归因于脑血管疾病,但由于大多数痴呆症研究仍集中在单纯的阿尔茨海默病上,对这些机制或治疗方法知之甚少。对血管因素在神经退行性变和痴呆症中的作用,尤其是小血管疾病的作用的深入理解,受到不精确数据的阻碍,这些数据包括有症状和临床“无症状”脑血管疾病的发病率和患病率、长期预后(认知、中风或功能方面)以及风险因素。开展新的长期随访的大型合作研究成本高昂且耗时,但推进该领域研究的大量数据已经存在。在神经退行性疾病研究联合计划资助的一项倡议中,55位国际专家对现有数据进行了调查和评估,从欧洲队列开始,以促进数据共享,从而加深对血管疾病如何影响脑结构和功能的理解,优化神经退行性疾病研究中脑血管疾病的研究方法,并将未来研究聚焦于知识空白。在此,我们总结了该倡议的结果和建议。我们识别了来自90多项研究的数据,包括超过66万名参与者,其中许多是神经退行性疾病数据倡议之外的数据。积极的回应意味着纳入了来自北美、澳大拉西亚和亚太地区的队列,创建了一个真正全球性的、合作的数据共享平台,并与主要的国家痴呆症倡议相联系。此外,经修订的世界卫生组织《国际疾病分类》第11版应通过为所有脑血管疾病表现创建一个类别来促进对血管相关脑损伤的识别,从而加速痴呆症预防靶点的确定。