Comparison of sample characteristics of Wisconsin Alzheimer's Disease Research Center participants with the Wisconsin state population—An evaluation of the recruitment effort

Yue Ma, Maria C. Mora Pinzon, William R. Buckingham, Andrew J. Bersch, W. Ryan Powell, Tamara J. LeCaire, Gilda E. Ennis, Yuetiva Deming, Erin M. Jonaitis, Nathaniel A. Chin, Lindsay R. Clark, Dorothy F. Edwards, Art Walaszek, Ozioma C. Okonkwo, Megan Zuelsdorff, Richard J. Chappell, Sterling C. Johnson, Sanjay Asthana, Carey E. Gleason, Amy J. Kind, Barbara B. Bendlin, Cynthia M. Carlsson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Understanding how a research sample compares to the population from which it is drawn can help inform future recruitment planning. We compared the Wisconsin Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (WADRC) participant sample to the Wisconsin state population (WI-pop) on key demographic, social exposome, and vascular risk measures.

METHODS

The WADRC sample included 930 participants. Population statistics were estimated using several national and state data sources. We compared WADRC to WI-pop for two age groups, 45–64 years and ≥65 years, separately.

RESULTS

Compared to WI-pop, WADRC participants were older and included more women, more Black and American Indian individuals, and fewer Hispanic and Asian individuals. WADRC participants had higher levels of educational attainment, consisted of smaller proportions living in rural areas and disadvantaged neighborhoods, and showed lower vascular risks. Greater differences between WADRC and WI-pop were found for most metrics in the ≥65 group compared to the 45–64 group.

DISCUSSION

The findings revealed opportunities to increase enrollment from the Hispanic/Latino and Asian American populations, to include participants from a broader range of educational backgrounds, and to enroll more residents from rural areas and disadvantaged neighborhoods, which may lead to a broader distribution of cardiovascular risk factors. Expanding sociodemographic and health profiles represented in the participant candidate pool for study selection and including those who are underrepresented in research may potentially reduce selection bias but not eliminate it. Statistical approaches can be applied to address bias and generalize findings from a study sample to its target population by adjusting for their differences in the joint distribution of covariates. Although research centers have different regional populations and specific recruitment focuses for scientific reasons, evaluating their participant characteristics may help plan engagement efforts to improve the inclusion of underrepresented groups and collaboratively support generalizable research nationwide.

Highlights

  • We compared the characteristics of Wisconsin Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (WADRC) participants with the Wisconsin population.
  • Metrics of comparison included demographics, social exposomes, and vascular risks.
  • WADRC participants are different from the Wisconsin population.
  • We explored the implications and causes of the differences.
  • We discussed strategies for engaging and recruiting underrepresented groups.
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威斯康星州阿尔茨海默病研究中心参与者的样本特征与威斯康星州人口的比较——对招募工作的评估
引言:了解一个研究样本如何与人口进行比较,可以帮助告知未来的招聘计划。我们比较了威斯康星州阿尔茨海默病研究中心(WADRC)的参与者样本和威斯康星州人口(WI-pop)的关键人口统计、社会暴露和血管风险措施。方法:WADRC样本共930人。人口统计数据是利用几个国家和州的数据来源估计的。我们将WADRC和WI-pop分别用于45-64岁和≥65岁两个年龄组进行比较。结果:与WI-pop相比,WADRC参与者年龄更大,包括更多的女性,更多的黑人和美洲印第安人,更少的西班牙裔和亚洲人。WADRC参与者受教育程度较高,居住在农村地区和弱势社区的比例较小,血管风险较低。与45-64岁组相比,≥65岁组的WADRC和WI-pop在大多数指标上存在较大差异。讨论:研究结果表明,有机会增加西班牙裔/拉丁裔和亚裔美国人的入组,包括来自更广泛教育背景的参与者,并招收更多来自农村地区和弱势社区的居民,这可能导致心血管危险因素的更广泛分布。扩大研究选择的参与者候选池中所代表的社会人口学和健康概况,并包括那些在研究中代表性不足的人,可能会减少选择偏差,但不能消除它。统计方法可以通过调整协变量联合分布中的差异来解决偏差,并将研究样本的发现推广到目标人群。尽管由于科学原因,研究中心有不同的区域人口和特定的招聘重点,但评估其参与者特征可能有助于计划参与工作,以改善代表性不足群体的包容性,并协同支持全国范围内的可推广研究。重点:我们比较了威斯康星州阿尔茨海默病研究中心(WADRC)参与者与威斯康星州人群的特征。比较指标包括人口统计、社会暴露和血管风险。WADRC的参与者与威斯康星州的人口不同。我们探讨了这些差异的含义和原因。我们讨论了参与和招募代表性不足群体的策略。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.10
自引率
2.10%
发文量
134
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: Alzheimer''s & Dementia: Translational Research & Clinical Interventions (TRCI) is a peer-reviewed, open access,journal from the Alzheimer''s Association®. The journal seeks to bridge the full scope of explorations between basic research on drug discovery and clinical studies, validating putative therapies for aging-related chronic brain conditions that affect cognition, motor functions, and other behavioral or clinical symptoms associated with all forms dementia and Alzheimer''s disease. The journal will publish findings from diverse domains of research and disciplines to accelerate the conversion of abstract facts into practical knowledge: specifically, to translate what is learned at the bench into bedside applications. The journal seeks to publish articles that go beyond a singular emphasis on either basic drug discovery research or clinical research. Rather, an important theme of articles will be the linkages between and among the various discrete steps in the complex continuum of therapy development. For rapid communication among a multidisciplinary research audience involving the range of therapeutic interventions, TRCI will consider only original contributions that include feature length research articles, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, brief reports, narrative reviews, commentaries, letters, perspectives, and research news that would advance wide range of interventions to ameliorate symptoms or alter the progression of chronic neurocognitive disorders such as dementia and Alzheimer''s disease. The journal will publish on topics related to medicine, geriatrics, neuroscience, neurophysiology, neurology, psychiatry, clinical psychology, bioinformatics, pharmaco-genetics, regulatory issues, health economics, pharmacoeconomics, and public health policy as these apply to preclinical and clinical research on therapeutics.
期刊最新文献
Data-driven discovery of associations between prescribed drugs and dementia risk: A systematic review Perspective: Minimally clinically important “symptomatic” benefit associated with disease modification resulting from anti-amyloid immunotherapy Dynamic neurocognitive adaptation in aging: Development and validation of a new scale Unraveling the impact of blood RANKL and OPG levels on Alzheimer's disease: Independent of bone mineral density and inflammation Comparison of sample characteristics of Wisconsin Alzheimer's Disease Research Center participants with the Wisconsin state population—An evaluation of the recruitment effort
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