University of Florida: Walking across the University of Florida’s Health Science Center campus, Adam Woods cites a sobering statistic. “By 2050, the U.S. population over the age of 65 will double,” he
says. “We’re simply not set up as a society to house and treat an
exponential growth of dementia patients. Economically, our healthcare
system is unable to absorb that impact.” Woods is an assistant professor of clinical and health psychology in
the College of Public Health and Health Professions as well as the
assistant director of UF’s Center for Cognitive Aging and Memory. He is
looking at ways to delay the onset of dementia, or just preventing
people from getting it all together. Besides the obviously devastating
diagnosis for a patient and their loved ones, there are the cold hard
facts of caring for someone with dementia: the astronomical financial
costs involved.
According to a 2015 report by the NIH’s National Institute on Aging,
in the last five years of life, total health care spending for people
with dementia was more than a quarter of a million dollars per person,
57 percent more than the costs associated with death from other
diseases, including cancer and heart disease.
“Half the expenses of long-term care for dementia patients comes from
the family, and the other half comes from taxpayers,” Woods said. “If
we can delay the onset of dementia by just one year, it would save the
U.S. hundreds of millions of dollars annually.”
How are Woods and his team at UF looking for ways to delay dementia?
By partnering with Arizona State University and the University of Miami
on research pertaining to Augmenting Cognitive Training in Older
Adults, or more informally, the ACT Grant. Woods is the principal investigator on the $6 million, multisite clinical trial.
“The primary goal is to evaluate how pairing a form of non-invasive
electrical brain stimulation, known as transcranial direct current
stimulation, with cognitive training may enhance the brain's
neurocognitive function in our participants and potentially slow or
prevent onset of dementia,” Woods said. “We teach the participants a
series of ‘brain games’ while they undergo brain stimulation. Using
state-of-the-art brain imaging methods, we look at how the participants’
brains are impacted by the training games and brain stimulation that we
ask them to do over a three-month period. The research question is,
can this type of brain training and stimulation slow down the brain’s
aging?
The study involves 360 participants. Researchers conduct a series of
initial scans for a baseline image, again after three months, and
finally after one year. The question they’re trying to answer: Do our
cognitive training therapies help delay the onset of dementia, or can we
prevent a person from getting dementia altogether?
Woods and his team work closely with UF Research Computing, home of
HiPerGator, the state of Florida’s first supercomputer. At the start of
the study, Woods purchased 100 cores on HiPerGator to process the
participants’ brain scans and analyze the data. Handling all of three
sites’ participant scans on the Gainesville campus makes sense for both
ease of analysis and cost savings.
“In the ‘old’ days (five years ago) we used to process the data – all
of these brain images – ourselves,” Woods said. “The costs involved, of
tying up staff to handle the data processing, and of dedicating a
computer for months on end, was staggering. With HiPerGator, we can use
the cores purchased to have multiple scans produced simultaneously.
Plus, doing all of the study sites' scans and data processing on our
supercomputer means we have an efficient way to produce study findings
at each stage of our research.”
Woods’ past sponsored research includes awards from the National
Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health, with focuses
on stroke, sarcopenia (loss of muscle tissue during the aging process),
and preventing disabilities in older persons.
“For me, this has always been about novel ways to help people,” Woods
said. “Let’s figure out, at a mechanistic level, but then let’s use
this knowledge and do some real good. Aging is relevant to everyone.
Some diseases impact 1 percent of the population, others impact 5
percent. But aging, God willing, affects all of us. We start aging
from the moment we are born … even before.”