| Literature DB >> 34268067 |
James A Hendrix1, Angelika Amon2, Leonard Abbeduto3, Stamatis Agiovlasitis4, Tarek Alsaied5, Heather A Anderson6, Lisa J Bain7, Nicole Baumer8, Anita Bhattacharyya9,10, Dusan Bogunovic11, Kelly N Botteron12, George Capone13, Priya Chandan14, Isabelle Chase15, Brian Chicoine16, Cécile Cieuta-Walti17, Lara R DeRuisseau18, Sophie Durand19, Anna Esbensen20, Juan Fortea21, Sandra Giménez22, Ann-Charlotte Granholm23,24, Laura J Hahn25, Elizabeth Head26, Hampus Hillerstrom1, Lisa M Jacola27, Matthew P Janicki28, Joan M Jasien29, Angela R Kamer30, Raymond D Kent9, Bernard Khor31, Jeanne B Lawrence32, Catherine Lemonnier19, Amy Feldman Lewanda33, William Mobley34, Paul E Moore35, Linda Pollak Nelson36, Nicolas M Oreskovic37,38, Ricardo S Osorio39, David Patterson23,40, Sonja A Rasmussen41, Roger H Reeves42, Nancy Roizen43, Stephanie Santoro38,44, Stephanie L Sherman45, Nasreen Talib46, Ignacio E Tapia47, Kyle M Walsh48, Steven F Warren49, A Nicole White50, Guang William Wong42,51, John S Yi52.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent advances in medical care have increased life expectancy and improved the quality of life for people with Down syndrome (DS). These advances are the result of both pre-clinical and clinical research but much about DS is still poorly understood. In 2020, the NIH announced their plan to update their DS research plan and requested input from the scientific and advocacy community.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Down syndrome; autism spectrum disorder; autoimmune disease; cognitive development; congenital heart disease; intellectual disability; leukemia; muscle hypotonia; obesity; obstructive sleep apnea; periodontitis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34268067 PMCID: PMC8279178 DOI: 10.3233/trd-200090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Sci Rare Dis
Fig. 1.Prevalence of Early Dementia and AD by Age [218].
Overall Priority Recommendations for DS Research
| Recommendations | Milestones |
|---|---|
| Establish a panel of DS experts to define clinical and genetic phenotypes | - Define DS phenotypes for clinical trials from existing data |
| Conduct an “All of US” DS sub-study of 5000 participants | - Use GWAS and clinical data to help define DS phenotypes |
| Expand genetic and epigenetic profiling beyond Chr21 | - Elucidate complex gene-network effects and incorporate knowledge from non-DS populations |
| Gather more unbiased -Omics data | - Global and tissue specific metabolomics data to help establish metabolic phenotypes and to discover new biomarkers of metabolic disease. |
| Expand the DS Connect portal and collect DS to compare with data from: | - the general population |
| Current understanding of DS neurobiology is derived largely from mouse studies (Ts65Dn, Tc1) including anatomical and behavioral analyses of organismal brain development. Develop and validate mouse models that better translate to characteristics in individuals with DS | - Support for new |
| Support new models (including in mouse, rat, or non-human best model DSprimate) that | - Develop animal models that can reflect the structural changes in human DS brain and other differences such as the immune system. |
| Develop novel cellular models of DS | - Support development of human DS cellular models (e.g. induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) neuronal cultures), exploring variation by both sex and genetic ancestry. |
| Increase collaboration between bench to bedside researchers to share results and enhance translational research in DS. | - Ensure that clinical scientists have the tools to implement advances from bench research, and that bench discoveries are important to clinical researchers. |
| Support studies in the DS population over the life course and help to define clinical phenotypes to inform future research including clinical trials. | - Expand and extend on-going longitudinal studies to keep these important cohorts generating valuable data from more people for more years. |
| Within existing and new longitudinal cohorts, support efforts to more clearly define and chart trajectory of: | - Cognitive function. |
| Establish new DS cohorts with specific goals | Develop partial trisomy and mosaic DS cohorts, including bio-samples, iPSC lines and brain banks. |
| Expand support for drug and devise RCT’s across the DS lifespan | - Build and sustain trial-ready DS cohorts across the lifespan. |
| Support for RCT’s on the efficacy of life-style interventions in the DS population across the lifespan. Explore outcomes of physical fitness, health, behavior, cognition, and development. | - Test interventions that effectively increase physical activity and reduce sedentary behavior. |
| Support research to enable RCT’s in DS. | - Find an appropriate control population with which to compare DS participants (related to BMI, BP, activity levels, intellectual disability, etc.). |
| Establish the safety and efficacy of FDA approved drugs in both children and adults with DS via RCT’s. | - Conduct RTC’s in drugs commonly used to treat mood disorders, cognitive deficits, autoimmune disorders, and other manifestations. |
| Expand support for clinical trial recruitment. | - Support efforts to inform participants and caregivers of the value of research activities and encourage trial participation. |
| Expand support and training in the conduct of DS RCT’s | - Provide training to sites that may not have clinical research experience or DS clinical experience. |
| Develop and disseminate methodology for studying cognitive/behavior outcome measures in the context of large, multi-site trials. | - Develop or employ outcome measures that have demonstrable clinical utility (i.e. predict real-world changes in behavior, cognition, and/or adaptive skill independence). |
| Expand clinical trial data sharing | - Harmonize DS clinical protocols with between networks in the US and internationally to enable more meaningful data sharing. |
| Expand support for centralized (or virtual) biorepository of DS samples collected across the life span. | - Expand support for brain banks and fluid biobanks from well-characterized participants with clinical, behavioral, and functional data and with REDCap accessibility. |
| Establish a single network for DS data. | - Continue efforts to establish data standards and data sharing in the DS research community. |
| Support training clinical trials and clinical neuroscience in DS. | - Provide training for clinicians and researchers in DS who are both established and early in their career to attract them to the field. |
| Expand the inclusion of individuals with DS who have been significantly under-represented and oftentimes excluded from all sorts of research. | - Develop strategies to increase the participation of people with DS in non-DS focused research. |