Worldwide, the number of people with dementia is projected to increase by more than 50% by 2050. Better understanding, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of dementia and associated neurodegenerative diseases is critical for improving the quality of life of ageing populations.

One of the primary challenges hindering breakthroughs in dementia treatments is the difficulty in recruiting a sufficiently large pool of volunteers for clinical studies. Often close to 80% of volunteer participants are excluded based on screening procedures.

With promising new treatments on the horizon for neurodegenerative conditions, it is crucial the UK improves the infrastructure for clinical trials to ensure people don鈥檛 miss out.

Programme overview

51爆料网 and the , with 拢20m funding from the , are working together to increase the number of people participating in dementia clinical trials in the UK.

In some cases, it can take to recruit enough participants to run an 18-month
dementia trial 鈥 while the average cancer trial takes 2.3 years from start to completion,
including the recruitment phase.聽The Accelerator will develop new, digitally enabled methodologies to deliver clinical trials at scale in community settings across the UK, increasing the
number of dementia trial participants to 鈥渢ens of thousands鈥.

This focus on simplicity and accessibility will broaden opportunities for people at risk or with early-stage dementia to participate in clinical research. Input from patients themselves will be integral to ensure the widest possible access.

The initiative is supporting the government鈥檚 Dame Barbara Windsor Dementia Goals programme (formerly known as the Dame Barbara Windsor Dementia Mission).

    1. Increasing trial recruitment: developing a biomarker minimum toolbox for screening.
    2. Accelerating low-cost, digitally enabled large-scale trials (scaling up: 100鈥檚 to 1,000鈥檚 participants), capitalising on existing UK cohorts and community-based infrastructure.
    3. Enabling collaborative research and trials via a secure UK-wide data platform: multi-dimensional FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable) and trustworthy data environments.
    4. Prioritising needs of industry innovators, patients, and the public through stakeholder design and dialogue.
  • The initiative aims to rapidly identify a large group of people who are at risk of or diagnosed with early-stage dementia. This will boost opportunities for these people to participate in research 鈥 offering them the chance to receive potentially life-changing new treatments as part of a clinical trial.

    The Accelerator will also speed up the development of new treatments for dementia by paving the way for faster, more efficient trials.