The study is a collaborative project between the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Erasmus University in the Netherlands and National Brain Research Centre at Manesar in Gurgaon. It is supported by the Department of Biotechnology.
Cohort studies are type of medical research used to investigate the causes of disease, establishing links between risk factors and health outcomes. They are planned in advance and carried out over a future period of time.
"We began the enrollment last year and with this new facility, now we have a dedicated centre for the research work. Before this, we had a stop-gap arrangement and we were using facilities of other departments," Head of Department of Neurology and Principal Investigator of the study Dr Kameshwar Prasad said.
The centre was inaugurated by Union Health Secretary C K Mishra in the presence of Secretary of Department of Biotechnology K VijayRaghavan, AIIMS Director M C Misra and Head of Department of Neurology and Counsellor for Science, Technology & Innovation at the Embassy of the Netherlands, Jelle Nijdam.
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He said the study has been inspired from cohort studies conducted in Framingham, Boston in the US and Rotterdam in the Netherlands.
The focus of the study is to determine genetic, lifestyle and socio-economic factors that are protective or risk factors for the occurrence of stroke, heart attack or cognitive decline in persons aged 50 and above, Prasad said.
"A total of 1,750 participants from urban site has been enrolled in the study, 1,260 have undergone various medical examinations at medical site and 1,000 have consented for the brain MRI scan," it said.
Mishra said, "The importance of the study derives from
the increasing portion of elderly population in the country. It is urgent and imperative that preventive strategies based on the sound epidemiological evidence are devised and implemented."
This demographic transition is set to increase disease burden due to various non-communicable diseases. Alzheimer's disease, vascular dementia, cerebro-vascular diseases are likely to top the list of causes of disease burden, he said.
"This study would serve as a template to use and analyse data and give us further insight," VijayRaghavan said.
"The study targets to take AIIMS to apparently healthy people to observe them over several years to the point of development of event. In some cases, compare and contrast those with event or no event, and determine the factors underlying the event.