The Scientific Program - Alzheimer's Disease and Dementia

Thursday, April 04, 2019 |
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Hall A-CAJAL |
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15:30-18:00 |
SESSION 4 | PLENARY LECTURES: ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE (AD) |
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Chairpersons: |
George Perry, USA & Thashi Chang, Sri Lanka |
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15:30-16:00 |
Beyond amyloid, the sweet trail to neuroprotection: Stefano Sensi, Italy |
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16:00-16:30 |
Tau seeding and disease progression in AD: Isidro Ferrer, Spain |
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16:30-17:00 |
Neuropathological basis of sleep disorders in neurodegenerative diseases: Lea Grinberg, USA/Brazil |
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17:00-18:00 |
Debate: Is preclinical AD a useful term? |
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Capsule: The diagnosis of AD has traditionally required both cognitive deterioration and certain pathological features, amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. However, the tissue changes appear decades before the clinical symptoms. Recently it has been suggested to term this stage as “preclinical AD”. Is this a useful term? |
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17:00-17:15 |
Host: Giulio Maria Pasinetti, USA |
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17:15-17:30 |
Yes: David Knopman, USA |
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17:30-17:45 |
No: Amos Korczyn, Israel |
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17:45-18:00 |
Discussions and rebuttals |
Friday April 05, 2019 |
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Hall- CERVANTES |
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08:00-08:30 |
ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE FREE COMMUNICATIONS Chairpersons: Nataliya Pryankova, Ukraine & Gabriel Vainstein, Israel
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08:00-08:10
08:10-08:20 |
Use [18]f-fluoro- deoxyglucose positron emission tomography and other biomarkers to assess risk of clinical progression in patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment: Maria Sagrario Manzano, Spain
Tau Protein in the Retina: Umur Kayabasi, Turkey |
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08:30-10:10 |
SESSION 17 | ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE (AD) |
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Chairpersons: |
Nataliya Pryankova, Ukraine & Gabriel Vainstein, Israel |
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08:30-09:20
08:30-08:40 08:40-08:55 08:55-09:10 09:10-09:20 |
Is the evidence sufficient to recommend dietary interventions to reduce the risk of AD progression? Capsule: Extensive epidemiologic evidence implicated modifiable metabolic and dietary factors in increasing the risk of dementia, including AD, and several interventions have shown promise in early trials. Definitive RCTs involving nutritional interventions to prevent the progression of cognitive decline in AD are eagerly awaited, but what do we need to do meanwhile?
Host: Yvonne Freund-Levi, Sweden Yes: Aron Troen, Israel No: Tobias Hartmann, Germany Discussions and Rebuttals |
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09:20-10:10 |
Should cognitive disorders in older age be studied with FDG PET and amyloid PET or with MRI and CSF evaluation? |
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Capsule: The clinical evaluation alone will misclassify about 20% of patients with dementia and a larger proportion of those with mild cognitive impairment. For this reason, biomarkers are used to help separate AD from frontotemporal dementia, which are treated differently. For this purpose, is it better to use PET metabolic biomarkers or MRI and CSF evaluation? |
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09:20-09:30 |
Host: Maria Sagrario Manzano, Spain |
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09:30-09:45 |
Pro FDG and amyloid PET: Joseph Masdeu, USA |
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09:45-10:00 |
Pro MRI and CSF: Guillermo Garcia Ribas, Spain |
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10:00-10:10 |
Discussion and rebuttals |
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10:10-10:25 |
Coffee Break |
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10:25-12:05 |
SESSION 18 | RISK FACTORS FOR AD |
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Chairpersons: |
Shira Knafo, Spain & Mee Young Park, South Korea |
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10:25-11:15 |
There is no need to define dementia sub-types in older patients, as the majority have mixed pathologies anyway. |
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Capsule: Researchers who examined older adults' brains after death found that most had two or more pathologies. Amyloid and tau were the most common pathology but rarely occurred alone. So, if the majority of older patients have mixed dementia, it may not be worthwhile to attempt to make a firm clinical diagnosis? |
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10:25-10:35 |
Host: Pierre Krolak-Salmon, France |
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10:35-10:50 |
Pro: Pasquale Calabrese, Switzerland |
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10:50-11:05 |
Con: Michael Ewers, Germany |
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11:05-11:15 |
Discussion and rebuttals |
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11:15-12:05 |
Microglia activation should be a therapeutic target. |
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Capsule: Microglia activation and other innate immune responses seem to be associated with most neurodegenerative conditions, including AD. Is microglia activation merely a non-specific response to AD pathology or should it be considered a potential therapeutic target? |
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11:15-11:25 |
Host: Robert Perneczky, Germany |
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11:25-11:40 |
Pro: Roger Bullock, UK |
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11:40-11:55 |
Con: Enrique Gabande, Spain |
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11:55-12:05 |
Discussion and rebuttals |
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13:15-14:15 |
Lunch Break |
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13:15-14:15 |
Meet the Expert- Alzheimer's disease (Rio Hortega) AMBAR (Alzheimer´s Management By Albumin Replacement) Trial Results: Clinical and Biomarker Update Laura Núñez, Spain Javier Olazarán, Spain |
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14:15-15:45 |
SESSION 19 | MIXED DEMENTIA |
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Chairpersons: |
Judith Aharon, Israel & Angel Martin Montes, Spain |
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14:15-14:55 |
Is APOE4 really toxic in AD? Capsule: The ε4 allele of apolipoprotein E (APOE) is the major genetic risk factor for AD. Many studies suggest that the differential effects of APOE isoforms on Aβ aggregation and clearance play the major role in AD pathogenesis. Inconsistent results among studies have made it difficult to define whether the APOE ε4 allele represents a gain of toxic function, a loss of neuroprotective function, or both. |
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14:15-14:25 |
Host: David Knopman, USA |
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14:25-14:35 |
Pro: Danny Michaelson, Israel |
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14:35-14:45 |
Con: Illiya Lefterov, USA |
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14:45-14:55 |
Discussion and rebuttals |
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14:55-15:45 |
Vascular risk factors in AD - real or fake? Capsule: Aging is associated with a large increase in the prevalence and incidence of degenerative and vascular dementia. Several vascular risk factors have been found to be associated with vascular dementia but also AD. Vascular risk factors and their treatments are a promising avenue of research for prevention of dementia, but do they really affect AD? |
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14:55-15:05 |
Host: Maria Sagrario Manzano, Spain |
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15:05-15:20 |
Real: Jan Kassubek, Germany |
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15:20-15:35 |
Fake: Giancarlo Logroscino, Italy |
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15:35-15:45 |
Discussion and rebuttals |
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15:45-16:00 |
Coffee Break |
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16:00-17:40 |
SESSION 20 | DEMENTIA CAUSES |
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Chairpersons: |
Nina Sofilkanych, Ukraine & Ascensión Zea-Sevilla, Spain |
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16:00-16:50 |
The recent reduction of dementia incidence can be ascribed mainly to better management of hypertension, dyslipidemia and diabetes. |
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Capsule: The prevalence of dementia is expected to soar as the average life expectancy increases, but recent epidemiological results suggest that the age-specific incidence of dementia is declining. We are going to discuss these results: is prevention possible? |
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16:00-16:10 |
Host: Michael Ewers, Germany |
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16:10-16:25 |
Yes: Milica G. Kramberger, Slovenia |
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16:25-16:40 |
No: Roger Bullock, UK |
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16:40-16:50 |
Discussion and rebuttals |
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16:50-17:40 |
Have we got it all wrong? Amyloid cascade is not the key etiological factor in AD. |
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Capsule: The dominant hypothesis of AD etiology which has been built around one casual factor only, ß-amyloid (Aß), remains unproven. No conclusive evidence has been presented that Aß pathology represents the first biomarker of the disease and the first sign of sporadic AD onset. Treatments aiming to reduce Aß formation have proven to be toxic or worsen cognition. Immunization with anti Aß antibodies has not yet demonstrated a clinical effect. Should we discard the amyloid hypothesis? |
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16:50-17:00 |
Host: Ruth Itzhaki, UK |
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17:00-17:15 |
Pro: Ezio Giacobini, Switzerland |
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17:15-17:30 |
Con: Eugen Tarnow, USA |
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17:30-17:40 |
Discussion and rebuttals |
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17:40-19:20 |
SESSION 21 | AD: CAUSE AND THERAPY |
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Chairpersons: |
Mun Seong Choi, South Korea & Latchezar Traykov, Bulgaria |
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17:40-18:30 |
Is herpes virus infection a risk factor for AD? |
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Capsule: Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV1), when present in the brain of carriers of APOE4, has been implicated as a major factor in AD. It is proposed that virus is normally latent in many elderly brains but reactivates periodically. Implicating HSV1 further in AD is the discovery that HSV1 DNA is specifically localized in amyloid plaques in AD. Can we implicate HSV in AD pathogenesis? |
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17:40-17:50 |
Host: David Knopman, USA |
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17:50-18:05 |
Yes: Ruth Itzhaki, UK |
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18:05-18:20 |
No: Israel Steiner, Israel |
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18:20-18:30 |
Discussion and rebuttals |
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18:30-19:20 |
Is non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) useful for improvement of cognition in MCI subjects? |
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Capsule: NIBS techniques include repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS). While these have been mostly used to treat pharmaco-resistant depression, mild cognitive impairment has also been reported to improve. However, the question remains: Is NIBS really useful for modulation of cognition in MCI? |
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18:30-18:40 |
Host: Jack de la Torre, USA |
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18:40-18:55 |
Yes: Irena Rektorova, Czech Republic |
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18:55-19:10 |
No: Friedhelm Hummel, Switzerland |
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19:10-19:20 |
Discussion and rebuttals |