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. 2022 Sep 22;8(1):e12348.
doi: 10.1002/trc2.12348. eCollection 2022.

Chronic neuropsychiatric sequelae of SARS-CoV-2: Protocol and methods from the Alzheimer's Association Global Consortium

Gabriel A de Erausquin  1 Heather Snyder  2 Traolach S Brugha  3 Sudha Seshadri  1 Maria Carrillo  2 Rajesh Sagar  4 Yueqin Huang  5 Charles Newton  6 Carmela Tartaglia  7 Charlotte Teunissen  8 Krister Håkanson  9 Rufus Akinyemi  10 Kameshwar Prasad  4 Giovanni D'Avossa  11 Gabriela Gonzalez-Aleman  12 Akram Hosseini  13 George D Vavougios  14 Perminder Sachdev  15 John Bankart  3 Niels Peter Ole Mors  16 Richard Lipton  17 Mindy Katz  17 Peter T Fox  1 Mohammad Zia Katshu  13 M Sriram Iyengar  18 Galit Weinstein  19 Hamid R Sohrabi  20 Rachel Jenkins  21 Dan J Stein  22 Jacques Hugon  23 Venetsanos Mavreas  24 John Blangero  25 Carlos Cruchaga  26 Murali Krishna  27 Ovais Wadoo  28 Rodrigo Becerra  29 Igor Zwir  26 William T Longstreth  30 Golo Kroenenberg  31 Paul Edison  32 Elizabeta Mukaetova-Ladinska  3 Ekkehart Staufenberg  33 Mariana Figueredo-Aguiar  34 Agustín Yécora  35 Fabiana Vaca  35 Hernan P Zamponi  35 Vincenzina Lo Re  36 Abdul Majid  37 Jonas Sundarakumar  38 Hector M Gonzalez  39 Mirjam I Geerlings  40 Ingmar Skoog  41 Alberto Salmoiraghi  42 Filippo Martinelli Boneschi  43 Vibuthi N Patel  1 Juan M Santos  34 Guillermo Rivera Arroyo  44 Antonio Caballero Moreno  45 Pascal Felix  46 Carla Gallo  47 Hidenori Arai  48 Masahito Yamada  49 Takeshi Iwatsubo  50 Malveeka Sharma  30 Nandini Chakraborty  3 Catterina Ferreccio  51 Dickens Akena  52 Carol Brayne  53 Gladys Maestre  25 Sarah Williams Blangero  25 Luis I Brusco  54 Prabha Siddarth  55 Timothy M Hughes  56 Alfredo Ramírez Zuñiga  57 Joseph Kambeitz  57 Agustin Ruiz Laza  58 Norrina Allen  59 Stella Panos  60 David Merrill  60 Agustín Ibáñez  61   62   63 Debby Tsuang  30 Nino Valishvili  64 Srishti Shrestha  65 Sophia Wang  66   67 Vasantha Padma  4 Kaarin J Anstey  15 Vijayalakshmi Ravindrdanath  38 Kaj Blennow  41 Paul Mullins  11 Emilia Łojek  67 Anand Pria  68 Thomas H Mosley  65 Penny Gowland  13 Timothy D Girard  69 Richard Bowtell  13 Farhaan S Vahidy  70   71   72   73
Affiliations

Chronic neuropsychiatric sequelae of SARS-CoV-2: Protocol and methods from the Alzheimer's Association Global Consortium

Gabriel A de Erausquin et al. Alzheimers Dement (N Y). .

Abstract

Introduction: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has caused >3.5 million deaths worldwide and affected >160 million people. At least twice as many have been infected but remained asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic. COVID-19 includes central nervous system manifestations mediated by inflammation and cerebrovascular, anoxic, and/or viral neurotoxicity mechanisms. More than one third of patients with COVID-19 develop neurologic problems during the acute phase of the illness, including loss of sense of smell or taste, seizures, and stroke. Damage or functional changes to the brain may result in chronic sequelae. The risk of incident cognitive and neuropsychiatric complications appears independent from the severity of the original pulmonary illness. It behooves the scientific and medical community to attempt to understand the molecular and/or systemic factors linking COVID-19 to neurologic illness, both short and long term.

Methods: This article describes what is known so far in terms of links among COVID-19, the brain, neurological symptoms, and Alzheimer's disease (AD) and related dementias. We focus on risk factors and possible molecular, inflammatory, and viral mechanisms underlying neurological injury. We also provide a comprehensive description of the Alzheimer's Association Consortium on Chronic Neuropsychiatric Sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (CNS SC2) harmonized methodology to address these questions using a worldwide network of researchers and institutions.

Results: Successful harmonization of designs and methods was achieved through a consensus process initially fragmented by specific interest groups (epidemiology, clinical assessments, cognitive evaluation, biomarkers, and neuroimaging). Conclusions from subcommittees were presented to the whole group and discussed extensively. Presently data collection is ongoing at 19 sites in 12 countries representing Asia, Africa, the Americas, and Europe.

Discussion: The Alzheimer's Association Global Consortium harmonized methodology is proposed as a model to study long-term neurocognitive sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection.

Key points: The following review describes what is known so far in terms of molecular and epidemiological links among COVID-19, the brain, neurological symptoms, and AD and related dementias (ADRD)The primary objective of this large-scale collaboration is to clarify the pathogenesis of ADRD and to advance our understanding of the impact of a neurotropic virus on the long-term risk of cognitive decline and other CNS sequelae. No available evidence supports the notion that cognitive impairment after SARS-CoV-2 infection is a form of dementia (ADRD or otherwise). The longitudinal methodologies espoused by the consortium are intended to provide data to answer this question as clearly as possible controlling for possible confounders. Our specific hypothesis is that SARS-CoV-2 triggers ADRD-like pathology following the extended olfactory cortical network (EOCN) in older individuals with specific genetic susceptibility.The proposed harmonization strategies and flexible study designs offer the possibility to include large samples of under-represented racial and ethnic groups, creating a rich set of harmonized cohorts for future studies of the pathophysiology, determinants, long-term consequences, and trends in cognitive aging, ADRD, and vascular disease.We provide a framework for current and future studies to be carried out within the Consortium. and offers a "green paper" to the research community with a very broad, global base of support, on tools suitable for low- and middle-income countries aimed to compare and combine future longitudinal data on the topic.The Consortium proposes a combination of design and statistical methods as a means of approaching causal inference of the COVID-19 neuropsychiatric sequelae. We expect that deep phenotyping of neuropsychiatric sequelae may provide a series of candidate syndromes with phenomenological and biological characterization that can be further explored. By generating high-quality harmonized data across sites we aim to capture both descriptive and, where possible, causal associations.

Keywords: SARS‐CoV‐2; cognitive impairment; dementia; neuropsychiatric sequelae; predictors.

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Conflict of interest statement

All authors state that they have no relationships/activities/interests to disclose related to the content of this submission. Author disclosures are available in the supporting information.

Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
Map of countries of origin of Consortium members
FIGURE 2
FIGURE 2
Proposed longitudinal schedule for assessment of cohort members. FDG, fluorodeoxyglucose; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; SARS‐CoV‐2, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2

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