The Swiss OMICS‐AD multimodal biomarker cohort study: design, methods, and cohort characteristics
Miriam Rabl, Leonardo Zullo, Jelena Wehrli, Pyry Helkkula, Karolin Hössel, Julius Popp

TL;DR
The OMICS-AD study uses multi-omics data from a Swiss cohort to better understand Alzheimer's disease and identify new biomarkers.
Contribution
A novel multimodal biomarker cohort study integrating omics data to explore Alzheimer's pathophysiology and neuropsychiatric symptoms.
Findings
The cohort includes 434 participants across four centers with detailed clinical and neuropsychological data.
31.4% of participants showed CSF biomarker profiles indicating AD pathology, with higher prevalence in MCI and mild AD dementia.
Irritability and depression were the most common neuropsychiatric symptoms reported in the cohort.
Abstract
Besides amyloid pathology and tau‐related neurodegeneration, multiple other molecular alterations and pathway dysregulations have been observed in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Omics and multi‐omics approaches may help to better understand this complex pathophysiology of AD, and to discover new biomarkers and targets for interventions. The OMICS‐AD study's main scope is to use multi‐omics data to a) better understand pathophysiological changes of AD and related neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS), and to b) identify and validate new biomarker candidates for AD and AD‐related outcomes such as cognitive decline or persistent NPS. Here, we describe the study design and participant characteristics. Participants with normal cognition (NC), subjective cognitive decline (SCD), mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and mild AD dementia were included at four Swiss memory clinic centres. Comprehensive…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Alzheimer's disease research and treatments · Neurological Disease Mechanisms and Treatments
