Clinical research in dementia: A perspective on implementing innovation

M. Boccardi*, R. Handels, M. Gold, A. Grazia, M.W. Lutz, M. Martin, R. Nosheny, J.M. Robillard, W. Weidner, J. Alexandersson, J.R. Thyrian, B. Winblad, P. Barbarino, A.S. Khachaturian, S. Teipel

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The increasing global prevalence of dementia demands concrete actions that are aimed strategically at optimizing processes that drive clinical innovation. The first step in this direction requires outlining hurdles in the transition from research to practice. The different parties needed to support translational processes have communication mismatches; methodological gaps hamper evidence-based decision-making; and data are insufficient to provide reliable estimates of long-term health benefits and costs in decisional models. Pilot projects are tackling some of these gaps, but appropriate methods often still need to be devised or adapted to the dementia field. A consistent implementation perspective along the whole translational continuum, explicitly defined and shared among the relevant stakeholders, should overcome the "research-versus-adoption" dichotomy, and tackle the implementation cliff early on. Concrete next steps may consist of providing tools that support the effective participation of heterogeneous stakeholders and agreeing on a definition of clinical significance that facilitates the selection of proper outcome measures.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2352-2367
Number of pages16
JournalAlzheimer's & Dementia
Volume18
Issue number11
Early online date24 Mar 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2022

Keywords

  • Alzheimer's disease
  • clinical innovation
  • dementia
  • implementation
  • methodology
  • neurocognitive disorders
  • translational research
  • BIOMARKER-BASED DIAGNOSIS
  • ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE
  • NONPHARMACOLOGICAL INTERVENTIONS
  • SYMPTOMS
  • PROGRESSION
  • IMPROVE
  • SCIENCE
  • TRIALS

Cite this