DOI: 10.1002/alz.075152 ISSN: 1552-5260

ADNI4’s novel remote screening approach ‐ weighing priorities in participant selection

Melanie Jayne Miller, Michael S. W. Weiner, Rachel L Nosheny, Bruce Albala, Monica Rivera Mindt, Ozioma Okonkwo, Paul S. S Aisen, Ron Petersen, Leslie M. Shaw, Laurel Beckett, Danielle J. Harvey, Emil Fristed
  • Psychiatry and Mental health
  • Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience
  • Geriatrics and Gerontology
  • Neurology (clinical)
  • Developmental Neuroscience
  • Health Policy
  • Epidemiology

Abstract

Background

The Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) is a longitudinal observational study of individuals across the dementia spectrum that validates biomarkers for clinical trials. The newest phase of the study, ADNI4, aims to substantially increase the inclusion of underrepresented populations to improve generalizability of ADNI results. Novel biomarkers, including a speech‐based cognitive assessment and blood‐based plasma biomarkers, are integrated into the study design as key participant screening measures.

Method

To help achieve recruitment goals, ADNI4 uses a new, multi‐phase approach to remotely enroll and screen participants. A large study cohort (aiming for 20,000+ participants) provide initial screening data via an online study platform including demographics, medical history related to study exclusionary criteria, and results from a speech‐based cognitive memory assessment (Novoic Ltd. Storyteller test) and a measure of subjective cognitive/functional decline (Everyday Cognition (ECog) 12‐item). Based on screening results, a subset of online study participants is referred to a Quest Diagnostics location to provide a blood sample for plasma biomarker analysis (aiming for 4,000+ participants). Finally, select participants are referred to ADNI clinical sites for in‐depth characterization (goal of up to 1,500 in‐clinic participants).

Result

We report ADNI’s initial approach for selecting participants from the online screening cohort to undergo plasma biomarker phenotyping, and subsequent selection to a clinical site. Participants from diverse demographic backgrounds (especially for race, ethnicity, and/or education) and those with a higher estimated likelihood of cognitive impairment are given priority in the referral selection process. Likelihood of cognitive impairment is assessed using results from subjective memory complaint questions, responses to the ECog 12‐item questionnaire, and the Novoic Storyteller results. Individuals with results showing high concordance across these measures are prioritized, as well as those who have subsequent plasma results indicating biomarker positivity.

Conclusion

Weighing the various study requirements and inclusivity goals increases the complexity of participant selection decision making, and is a time‐intensive process. As the ADNI study progresses we aim to automate the participant selection/referral process by developing algorithms that account and encode for changing study prioritizations and dynamics across numerous dimensions. Learnings from ADNI4’s new remote processes will help inform future clinical trial design.

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