Nested case control study of prevalence and aetiology of dementia in a rural Ugandan population, and a situational analysis of services available for affected families: a protocol. Part of the DEPEND Uganda study (Dementia EPidemiology, unmet Need and co-Developing Solutions).

Q1 Medicine
Wellcome Open Research Pub Date : 2024-09-24 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.12688/wellcomeopenres.22944.1
Josephine Prynn, Racheal Alinaitwe, Beatrice Kimono, Tunde Peto, Nicholas J Ashton, Claire J Steves, Joseph Mugisha, Martin Prince
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The prevalence of dementia in low- and middle-income countries is increasing, yet epidemiological data from African populations remain scarce. Crucial risk factors differ in Africa from more intensively studied global areas, including a high burden of cerebrovascular disease and HIV, but lower rates of other risk factors like physical inactivity.Understanding dementia aetiology in African settings has been limited by the expensive and invasive nature of biomarker testing. This study leverages developments in blood-based and retinal imaging biomarker technology to examine the drivers of dementia in older Ugandans.People with dementia have complex needs benefiting from multi-dimensional support. Understanding current services will allow identification of barriers and opportunities to strengthen support available to people with dementia and their families.

Methods: The study is nested within the existing General Population Cohort run by the MRC/UVRI & LSHTM Research Unit. Currently, all adults aged 60+ (around 1400) are undergoing brief cognitive screening.In Part 1, cohort participants will be selected based on cognitive screening scores to undergo detailed cognitive assessment, using methods developed by the 10/66 Dementia Research Group. Part 2 is a case control study of people with and without dementia using antecedent data, questionnaires, physical assessment, retinal imaging, and Alzheimer's blood-based biomarkers. We will also compare disability, frailty, quality of life, and social engagement in people with and without dementia.Part 3 assesses current provision of formal support for people with dementia through review of publicly available literature and expert interviews.

Conclusions: This is the first study in Africa using blood-based and retinal imaging biomarkers to examine the pathological processes underlying dementia, and it will systematically map services available for people with dementia. This paves the way for effective policy strategies for both dementia prevention and support for people with dementia and their families.

对乌干达农村人口中痴呆症的发病率和病因进行嵌套病例对照研究,并对受影响家庭可获得的服务进行情景分析:协议书。这是乌干达 DEPEND 研究(痴呆症流行病学、未满足需求和共同开发解决方案)的一部分。
背景:痴呆症在低收入和中等收入国家的发病率正在上升,但非洲人口的流行病学数据仍然很少。非洲的关键风险因素与全球研究较多的地区不同,包括脑血管疾病和艾滋病的高负担,但其他风险因素(如缺乏运动)的发病率较低。这项研究利用血液和视网膜成像生物标志物技术的发展,研究乌干达老年人痴呆症的诱因。痴呆症患者需求复杂,需要多方面的支持。痴呆症患者的需求很复杂,需要多方面的支持。了解当前的服务有助于找出障碍和机会,从而加强对痴呆症患者及其家人的支持:该研究嵌套在由 MRC/UVRI 和 LSHTM 研究小组管理的现有普通人群队列中。目前,所有年龄在 60 岁以上的成年人(约 1400 人)都在接受简短的认知筛查。在第一部分中,将根据认知筛查得分挑选出队列参与者,采用 10/66 痴呆症研究小组开发的方法进行详细的认知评估。第 2 部分是病例对照研究,采用前因数据、问卷调查、身体评估、视网膜成像和基于阿尔茨海默氏症血液的生物标志物,对痴呆症患者和非痴呆症患者进行研究。我们还将比较痴呆症患者和非痴呆症患者的残疾程度、虚弱程度、生活质量和社会参与度。第三部分通过审查公开文献和专家访谈,评估目前为痴呆症患者提供的正规支持:这是非洲第一项利用血液和视网膜成像生物标志物来研究痴呆症病理过程的研究,它将系统地绘制痴呆症患者可获得的服务地图。这将为痴呆症的预防以及为痴呆症患者及其家人提供支持的有效政策战略铺平道路。
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来源期刊
Wellcome Open Research
Wellcome Open Research Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
426
审稿时长
1 weeks
期刊介绍: Wellcome Open Research publishes scholarly articles reporting any basic scientific, translational and clinical research that has been funded (or co-funded) by Wellcome. Each publication must have at least one author who has been, or still is, a recipient of a Wellcome grant. Articles must be original (not duplications). All research, including clinical trials, systematic reviews, software tools, method articles, and many others, is welcome and will be published irrespective of the perceived level of interest or novelty; confirmatory and negative results, as well as null studies are all suitable. See the full list of article types here. All articles are published using a fully transparent, author-driven model: the authors are solely responsible for the content of their article. Invited peer review takes place openly after publication, and the authors play a crucial role in ensuring that the article is peer-reviewed by independent experts in a timely manner. Articles that pass peer review will be indexed in PubMed and elsewhere. Wellcome Open Research is an Open Research platform: all articles are published open access; the publishing and peer-review processes are fully transparent; and authors are asked to include detailed descriptions of methods and to provide full and easy access to source data underlying the results to improve reproducibility.
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