- Alzheimer's Association TrialMatch Connects People with Potentially Life-Altering Studies -
The Alzheimer's Association announced today the launch of Alzheimer's Association TrialMatch(TM), a confidential and free interactive tool that provides comprehensive clinical trial information and an individualized trial matching service for people with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias. The Internet (www.alz.org/trialmatch) and phone-based (800-272-3900) service debuted during the Alzheimer's Association International Conference on Alzheimer's Disease 2010 (AAICAD 2010) in Honolulu, HI.
There are as many as 5.3 million Americans living with the Alzheimer's and every 70 seconds someone in America develops the disease, according to the Association's 2010 Alzheimer's Disease Facts and Figures. This year, there will be one half million new cases of Alzheimer's; in 2050, there will be nearly a million new cases annually.
"Alzheimer's disease is clearly the #1 public health challenge of the 21st century and research is the only way to solve this problem," said William Thies, PhD, Chief Medical and Scientific Officer at the Alzheimer's Association.
Recruiting and retaining trial participants is one of the greatest obstacles to developing the next generation of Alzheimer's treatments, perhaps second only to lack of funding.
"If patients are not enrolling in trials, there can be no advances in diagnosis, treatment and prevention, making the lack of study participants a significant public health issue," Thies said. "Alzheimer's Association TrialMatch provides a first-of-its-kind service in Alzheimer's by delivering a user-friendly and individualized guide to clinical trials for people with Alzheimer's, their healthcare professionals, caregivers and healthy volunteers."
More than 100 clinical studies in Alzheimer's and dementia are currently taking place and dozens more experimental compounds are moving from the laboratory to clinical testing. For people with Alzheimer's and their caregivers, clinical trials present an opportunity to play a more active role in their own treatment – ultimately contributing to scientific discovery and benefiting future generations.