中文无码

Fast Facts on Precision Medicine: Predicting Alzheimer鈥檚 Onset

[image name]

Alzheimer鈥檚 disease still has limited treatments. But being able to predict when a person with mild cognitive impairment will transition to a more serious dementia can help provide individuals and their families with a timeline and trajectory of their disease, so they can prepare for the future and make financial and care decisions.

Precision Medicine at Work

The disease trajectory is the focus of an ongoing research project at Johns Hopkins鈥 . Using electronic health record data from 140,000 patients compiled by the Johns Hopkins鈥 , a data analytics tool, investigators are developing two models to forecast patients鈥 Alzheimer鈥檚 disease trajectory. One model uses de-identified information from patients who come to the Johns Hopkins鈥 . The other model follows a more general population 鈥 patients over age 65 who have seen primary care physicians at Johns Hopkins Community Physicians鈥 offices in Maryland 鈥 data from whom could be used to identify those who could benefit from additional cognitive screening.

For the model that uses data from patients seen in the Memory and Alzheimer鈥檚 Treatment Center, the researchers have found that cognitive assessments, diagnoses for depression or other psychiatric conditions, and prescriptions for antidepressants are among the factors that appear to contribute to a patient鈥檚 future trajectory, says , an assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences working on the project.

The model following patients at Johns Hopkins Community Physicians is a different story. 鈥淚n the primary care model, it鈥檚 a little bit more interesting,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing more cardiovascular and metabolic diagnoses and lab results that are playing a role in the predictions. Those are known risk factors for dementia, but one of the important things we鈥檝e found out about these models is that a different set of factors in these two patient populations are most useful.鈥

For now, the models incorporate information such as patient diagnoses and medications. But the long-term goal is to add in information such as imaging data, clinical notes and genetic screening evidence.

ADVERTISEMENT

Researchers hope to bring the models into patient care within a year or two. 鈥淭here is also the potential to use this information for targeting treatments to patients who may benefit,鈥 Adams says, 鈥渂ut we want to do more investigation about how well this type of information predicts response to some of the pharmaceutical treatments for dementia that are most effective for patients with mild cognitive impairment.鈥

More information about .