Researchers Receive $15.7 Million NIH Grant for the Arizona Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center

Grant will continue to support Arizona’s leadership roles in the fight against Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias

PHOENIX (December 2, 2021) – Researchers from seven institutions across Arizona are the leads for a prestigious grant expected to total $15.7 million over five years from the National Institute on Aging (NIA), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), to provide continued support for the  Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (ADRC).

ADRCs are congressionally designated NIH Centers of Excellence. They play crucial roles in the National Plan to Address Alzheimer’s Disease,, the advancement of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias research and care, and the effort to find effective ways to treat and prevent these devastating diseases as soon as possible.

The ADRC grant will support Arizona’s pioneering contributions to Alzheimer’s research and care in several important ways by:

Introducing and supporting the development of talented researchers and clinicians from diverse backgrounds to Alzheimer’s disease research and care.

Providing education programs and outreach services for people affected by the disease including their family caregivers, programs to raise awareness about research opportunities for people with and without the disease and foster the inclusion of individuals from Arizona’s Hispanic/Latino, Native American, and other underrepresented communities.

Generating and providing widely shared resources of data and biological samples from annually assessed research participants, supporting hundreds of researchers inside the state and around the world.

“We could not be more grateful to our participating researchers and institutions, the state and NIH for the chance to make a profound difference in Alzheimer’s disease research and care,” said Eric Reiman, MD, director of the NIA-supported Arizona ADRC and executive director of Banner Alzheimer’s Institute. “In addition to our other goals, we hope to become a go-to resource for the development of promising blood tests, find effective Alzheimer’s prevention therapies within the next five years, and capitalize on our ADRC resources to support these endeavors.”

Since becoming the first multi-institutional research program to receive an ADRC grant in 2001, Arizona has become the most extensive statewide collaboration in Alzheimer’s research in the country. The Arizona ADRC has made ground-breaking contributions in the early detection diagnosis, study, and prevention of Alzheimer’s disease, studies of the aging mind and brain, and the roles of brain imaging and emerging blood-based biomarkers in these endeavors.

The new grant will help establish the role of promising blood tests in Alzheimer’s research, clinical trials, and clinical care, and will support Arizona’s efforts to help find effective prevention therapies by 2025.

The Arizona ADRC includes researchers from seven organizations: Arizona State University (ASU), Banner Alzheimer’s Institute, Banner Sun Health Research Institute, Barrow Neurological Institute, Mayo Clinic Arizona, the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen) and the University of Arizona (UArizona). Together, they provide shared resources to support the detection, tracking, diagnosis, study, treatment and prevention of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias, the training of researchers and clinicians from diverse backgrounds, and the inclusion of persons from underrepresented groups through seven core areas. These core areas include:

  • The Administrative Core led by Dr. Eric Reiman from Banner Alzheimer’s Institute and associate directors Dr. Richard Caselli from Mayo Clinic Arizona and Dr. Jessica Langbaum from Banner Alzheimer’s Institute with additional leadership provided by Andrea Schmidt from Banner Alzheimer’s Institute. This core includes a Developmental Project Program led by UArizona’s Dr. Carol Barnes. It provides leadership, support, and the organizational structure for the statewide ADRC.
    The Clinical Core led by Dr. Caselli and co-led by Dr. Alireza Atri from Banner Sun Health Research Institute. It includes five locations across Arizona which follow about 550 research participants per year (with and without the disease), many of whom donate their brains after they die.
  • The Biomarker Core led by Dr. Gene Alexander from UArizona and co-led by Drs. Atri and Thomas Beach from Banner Sun Health Research Institute; Dr. Yi Su from Banner Alzheimer’s Institute; and Dr. Matthew Huentelman from TGen, an affiliate of City of Hope. It oversees the acquisition and analysis amyloid and tau PET scans, MRIs, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), blood samples and DNA, provides a shared resource of biological specimens for the field, and will provide a go-to resource for the diagnostic validation of emerging blood tests.
  • The Data Management and Statistics Core led by Dr. Kewei Chen and co-led by Don Saner, both from Banner Alzheimer’s Institute, and includes multi-institutional data management and statistical teams to provide a shared resource of privacy protected data for the field, develop powerful data analysis tools, and provide data analysis services, mentorship and support for numerous researchers inside and outside the state.
  • The Neuropathology Core led by Banner Sun Health Research Institute’s by Drs. Beach and Geidy Serrano. It oversees a rapid brain and body donation program, provides comprehensive neuropathological assessments, and provides a resource of high-quality brain tissue to hundreds of researchers around the world each year.
  • The Outreach, Recruitment, and Engagement (ORE) Core led by Dr. David Coon from ASU’s Edson College of Nursing and Health Innovation and Dr. Langbaum. It provides a wide range of education, outreach and engagement programs for people with and without the disease, their families, and professional caregivers, including those from Arizona’s rapidly growing Hispanic/Latino community, Native American communities, and other underrepresented groups. It works closely with the Clinical Core to support their inclusion in research studies to advance the fight against Alzheimer’s disease together.
  • The Research Education Component (REC) led by Dr. Roberta Brinton from UArizona and Dr. Heather Bimonte-Nelson from ASU. It provides education and innovative collaborative training opportunities for researchers and professional caregivers, including those from diverse backgrounds and underrepresented groups, to help establish the next generation of researchers.

The Arizona ADRC is funded by NIH grant P30AG072980.

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About Arizona State University

Arizona State University, ranked No. 1 “Most Innovative School” in the nation by U.S. News & World Report for seven years in succession, has forged the model for a New American University. ASU is a comprehensive public research institution, measured not by whom it excludes, but by whom it includes and how they succeed; advancing research and discovery of public value; and assuming fundamental responsibility for the economic, social, cultural and overall health of the communities it serves. ASU operates on the principles that learning is a personal and original journey for each student; that they thrive on experience and that the process of discovery cannot be bound by traditional academic disciplines. Through innovation and a commitment to accessibility, ASU has drawn pioneering researchers to its faculty even as it expands opportunities for qualified students, attracting some of the highest caliber students from all 50 states and more than 130 nations.

About Banner Alzheimer’s Institute

Since its inception in 2006, Banner Alzheimer’s Institute (BAI) has sought to find effective Alzheimer’s disease prevention therapies without losing another generation, establish a new model of dementia care for patients and family caregivers, and forge new models of collaboration in biomedical research. It has made groundbreaking contributions to the unusually early detection, tracking, diagnosis and study of Alzheimer’s, and aims to find an effective prevention therapy by 2025. It includes the pioneering Alzheimer’s Prevention Initiative (API), an extensive profile of research studies and clinical trials, comprehensive clinical, family and community service programs, a leading brain imaging research program, and strategic partnerships with numerous public and private research organizations around the world.

About Banner Sun Health Research Institute

Since 1986, Banner Sun Health Research Institute, part of nonprofit Banner Health, has been a leader nationally and internationally in the effort to find answers to disorders of aging including Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease. The institute’s Cleo Roberts Center for Clinical Research takes laboratory discoveries to clinical trials that foster hope for new treatments. Banner Health is Arizona’s leading health care provider and largest private employer. For more information, visit bannershri.com or visit us on Facebook.

About Barrow Neurological Institute

Barrow Neurological Institute at Dignity Health St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix is internationally recognized as a leader in neurosurgery, neurology, neurological research and patient care. Consistently ranked among the top facilities in the United States for neurological and neurosurgical care, Barrow treats patients with a wide range of neurological conditions, including brain and spinal tumors, Alzheimer’s disease, cerebrovascular conditions, concussions and neuromuscular disorders. Its surgeons perform more neurosurgeries annually than any hospital in the nation and the Institute is proud to be home of the Muhammad Ali Parkinson Center. For more information, please visit barrowneuro.org.

About Mayo Clinic

Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit organization committed to innovation in clinical practice, education and research, and providing compassion, expertise and answers to everyone who needs healing. Visit the Mayo Clinic News Network for additional Mayo Clinic news and Mayo Clinic Facts for more information about Mayo.

About TGen, an affiliate of City of Hope

Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen) is a Phoenix, Arizona-based nonprofit organization dedicated to conducting groundbreaking research with life-changing results. TGen is affiliated with City of Hope, a world-renowned independent research and treatment center for cancer, diabetes and other life-threatening diseases: CityofHope.org. This precision medicine affiliation enables both institutes to complement each other in research and patient care, with City of Hope providing a significant clinical setting to advance scientific discoveries made by TGen. TGen is focused on helping patients with neurological disorders, cancer, diabetes and infectious diseases through cutting-edge translational research (the process of rapidly moving research toward patient benefit). TGen physicians and scientists work to unravel the genetic components of both common and complex rare diseases in adults and children. Working with collaborators in the scientific and medical communities worldwide, TGen makes a substantial contribution to help our patients through efficiency and effectiveness of the translational process. For more information,  visit: tgen.org. Follow TGen on FacebookLinkedIn and Twitter @TGen.

About the University of Arizona

The University of Arizona, a land-grant university with two independently accredited medical schools, is one of the nation’s top 50 public universities, according to U.S. News & World Report. Established in 1885, the university is widely recognized as a student-centric university and has been designated as a Hispanic Serving Institution by the U.S. Department of Education. The university ranked in the top 20 in 2019 in research expenditures among all public universities, according to the National Science Foundation, and is a leading Research 1 institution with $734 million in annual research expenditures. The university advances the frontiers of interdisciplinary scholarship and entrepreneurial partnerships as a member of the Association of American Universities, the 66 leading public and private research universities in the U.S. It benefits the state with an estimated economic impact of $4.1 billion annually. For the latest on the University of Arizona response to the novel coronavirus, visit the university’s COVID-19 webpageThe University of Arizona Land Acknowledgement

 

 

Posted in AZBio News.