Department of Neurology, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI, USA.
Neuroscience & Public Policy Program, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI, USA.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2022;87(3):1167-1179. doi: 10.3233/JAD-215521.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) begins with an asymptomatic "preclinical" phase, in which abnormal biomarkers indicate risk for developing cognitive impairment. Research is increasingly focused on validating biomarkers to improve reliable diagnosis and timely clinical treatment of AD. Most preclinical biomarker research lacks adequate representation of Black/African American and other racially and ethnically minoritized individuals, limiting the applicability of data to these groups. This may exacerbate existing disparities by hindering diagnosis and treatment among racially and ethnically minoritized individuals.
Understand the factors influencing willingness of Blacks/African Americans to participate in AD biomarker research and identify opportunities to improve enrollment.
We enrolled Blacks/African Americans (N = 145) between 46-85 years of age who had previously participated in AD research. Participants gave open-ended responses to a vignette describing a hypothetical biomarker research study. Using qualitative content analysis, we identified themes that motivated and discouraged enrollment in AD biomarker research.
Participant responses were categorized into several themes. Themes motivating participation included a desire to know their biomarker results and to support research. Major themes discouraging participation included concerns about potential negative psychological outcomes to learning one's increased risk for AD, doubt about the usefulness of testing, and worry about the potential physical harms of testing.
Understanding themes motivating and discouraging AD preclinical biomarker research participation may inform research material development, approach to community engagement, and/or trial design to increase enrollment of Blacks/African Americans.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)始于无症状的“临床前”阶段,在此期间,异常的生物标志物表明有认知障碍的风险。研究越来越关注验证生物标志物,以改善 AD 的可靠诊断和及时的临床治疗。大多数临床前生物标志物研究缺乏对黑人和其他少数族裔人群的充分代表性,限制了数据在这些人群中的适用性。这可能会通过阻碍少数族裔人群的诊断和治疗来加剧现有的差异。
了解影响黑人和非洲裔美国人参与 AD 生物标志物研究的意愿的因素,并确定改善参与度的机会。
我们招募了年龄在 46-85 岁之间的黑人和非洲裔美国人(N=145),他们之前曾参加过 AD 研究。参与者对描述一项假设性生物标志物研究的情景描述给出了开放式的回答。我们使用定性内容分析,确定了激励和阻碍 AD 生物标志物研究参与的主题。
参与者的回答分为几个主题。参与的动机主题包括了解自己的生物标志物结果和支持研究的愿望。主要的参与阻碍主题包括对了解自己患 AD 风险增加可能带来的潜在负面心理后果的担忧、对测试的有用性的怀疑,以及对测试可能带来的身体伤害的担忧。
了解激励和阻碍 AD 临床前生物标志物研究参与的主题,可能为研究材料的开发、社区参与的方法以及/或试验设计提供信息,以增加黑人和非洲裔美国人的参与度。