Understanding ethnic diversity in open dementia neuroimaging datasets

Nicholas Yew Wei Heng, Timothy Rittman
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Abstract

Abstract Ethnic differences in dementia are increasingly recognised in epidemiological measures and diagnostic biomarkers. Nonetheless, ethnic diversity remains limited in many study populations. Here we provide insights into ethnic diversity in open access neuroimaging dementia datasets. Datasets comprising dementia populations with available data on ethnicity were included. Statistical analyses of sample and effect sizes were based on the Cochrane Handbook. 19 databases were included, with 17 studies of healthy groups or combination of diagnostic groups if breakdown was unavailable, and 12 of MCI and dementia groups. Combining all studies on dementia patients, the largest ethnic group was Caucasian (20,547 participants) with the next most common being Afro-Caribbean (1958), followed by Asian (1211). The smallest effect size detectable within the Caucasian group was 0.03, compared to Afro-Caribbean (0.1) and Asian (0.13). Our findings quantify the lack of ethnic diversity in openly available dementia datasets. More representative data would facilitate the development and validation of biomarkers relevant across ethnicities.
了解开放痴呆神经影像学数据集的种族多样性
痴呆症的种族差异越来越多地在流行病学测量和诊断生物标志物中得到认识。尽管如此,在许多研究人群中,种族多样性仍然有限。在这里,我们提供了对开放获取神经成像痴呆症数据集的种族多样性的见解。纳入了包含痴呆症人群的数据集,并提供了种族数据。样本和效应量的统计分析基于Cochrane手册,纳入了19个数据库,其中17个研究是健康组或诊断组的组合(如果无法分类),12个是轻度认知障碍和痴呆组。综合所有关于痴呆患者的研究,最多的种族是白种人(20,547名参与者),其次是非洲裔加勒比人(1958),其次是亚洲人(1211)。在白种人组中可检测到的最小效应大小为0.03,而非裔加勒比人(0.1)和亚洲人(0.13)。我们的研究结果量化了公开可用的痴呆症数据集中缺乏种族多样性。更具代表性的数据将促进跨种族相关生物标志物的开发和验证。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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