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Requests for Alzheimer's Disease Research
Grants
up by 33%, as Federal Funding in doubt
U.S.
cutbacks could hurt Boomers and Veterans
impacted by Alzheimer's, warns American
Health Assistance Foundation
November 15, 2011--The
American Health Assistance Foundation (AHAF),
a nonprofit organization funding innovative
research through its Alzheimer’s Disease
Research (ADR) program, today announced that
the number of scientists seeking ADR
research grants through its annual
application process increased by 33% this
year. “It’s a sign of difficult times for
the scientific community,” said AHAF Vice
President of Scientific Affairs Guy Eakin,
Ph.D. “Finding government funding is tough
now, and more researchers are looking to
private funding sources like AHAF than ever
before. But we can’t meet all the need,” he
added.
AHAF was flooded with 332 grant
proposals, involving 700 scientists at
213 organizations. This year’s funding
applicants collectively requested more
than $83.9 million—a figure exceeding
the $74 million that ADR has granted to
researchers over the past 25 years.
In the U.S., the deadlock in Congress on how
to handle the federal budget deficit has
raised questions about the future and levels
of Alzheimer’s disease research funding
through the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
The “Silver Tsunami” Threat of Unmet Need
The uncertainty over federal funding for
Alzheimer’s research takes on more urgency
in the face of a huge demographic wave of
people facing Alzheimer’s over the next
three decades. Today, 5.4 million people in
the U.S. have Alzheimer’s disease, a number
expected to triple over the next 40 years.
“These figures could bankrupt our health
care system,” said Eakin.
Now in their 80s or older, more than one in
three members of the surviving World War II
generation is estimated to have Alzheimer’s
disease. The post-war Baby Boomer generation
is also confronting Alzheimer’s disease
directly, as caregivers for the previous
generation and as patients themselves.
“Boomers are reaching age 65 at the rate of
one every eight seconds. At that age, one’s
risk of having Alzheimer’s doubles every
five years,” noted Eakin.
Alzheimer’s research is already
substantially underfunded compared to other
serious diseases affecting large
populations. Last year Congress allocated
several billion dollars each for heart
disease and cancer, but only $450 million
for Alzheimer’s disease.
“Of the top 10 deadliest diseases in the
U.S., only Alzheimer’s disease has no
treatment to slow or stop the disease beyond
symptomatic treatments. There is currently
no prevention, no remission, and no cure for
Alzheimer’s disease. That’s all the more
reason why more research is desperately
needed,” Eakin added.
Cuts to NIH funding, or even maintenance of
funding at current inadequate levels, could
prove expensive in the decades to come,
given the rising costs of caring for
increasing numbers of Alzheimer’s patients.
The price tag is an estimated $183 billion
this year, and is projected to rise to a
cumulative $10 trillion over the next 10
years, and a cumulative $20.4 trillion over
the next four decades.
Guy Eakin discussed the top trends in
Alzheimer’s disease research in a new AHAF
Question and Answer feature, The
State of Research on Alzheimer’s Disease.
For Some Scientists, It’s Personal Now
“Unfortunately, more and more people are
learning about Alzheimer’s disease from
experience, often because they know a loved
one with the disease,” said Eakin. Many
relatives are determined to do something
about the Alzheimer’s crisis—including those
in the scientific community.
“My work took on a very personal nature when
my mother was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s
disease,” saidGary
Landreth, Ph.D., of Case Western
University in Cleveland, a recipient of AHAF
research grants.
Marta
Cortes-Canteli, Ph.D., an AHAF
grantee at Rockefeller University in New
York, explained, “I decided to study
Alzheimer’s disease because it is a
heart-breaking disorder, not only for
patients but also their families. I know
this from personal experience since my
paternal grandfather died with Alzheimer’s
disease.”
Honoring Veterans on 11/11, and Caring for
Those with Alzheimer’s Disease
“Alzheimer’s can strike a wide range of
ages, but for most of us, our window of
greatest risk begins around age 65 and
increases for the remainder of our lives,”
noted Eakin. This means the Alzheimer’s
epidemic is reaching growing numbers of
Vietnam veterans, in addition to the older
veterans of World War II and Korea.
The younger veterans of the Iraq and
Afghanistan wars may be facing a new risk
for the disorder. Thanks to modern medicine,
a number of these vets have survived head
trauma that would have been fatal in
previous eras. New evidence suggests that
some of these veterans’ injuries may also
put them at increased risk for Alzheimer’s
disease in the future. “It’s clear that
traumatic brain injury is an important and
sorely understudied topic with very clear
implications from the sports arena to the
battlefield,” said Eakin.
Veterans Gonzalo
Garza and Frank
Fuerst served in the military and
later provided caregiving for spouses with
Alzheimer’s disease. Each wrote a book to
share his experiences with others, and both
tell their story on the AHAF website.
More than 70% of those with Alzheimer’s
disease are cared for at home, often by
loved ones without formal training, making
the economic and human toll on families
another tragic aspect of this disease. More
than six out of ten Alzheimer’s and dementia
caregivers rank the emotional stress of
providing care as high or very high.
Resources for caregivers are available on
AHAF’s Living
with Alzheimer’s web page.
About the American Health Assistance
Foundation
The American Health Assistance Foundation (www.ahaf.org)
is a nonprofit organization dedicated to
finding cures for age-related degenerative
diseases by funding research worldwide under
its three programs: Alzheimer’s Disease
Research, Macular Degeneration Research, and
National Glaucoma Research. AHAF also
provides public information about these
diseases, including risk factors,
preventative lifestyles, current treatments,
and coping strategies.
To learn more about degenerative disease
research, visit www.ahaf.org/research or
call 800-437-2423. Stay connected to
ground-breaking research news by signing up
for AHAF eAlerts at www.ahaf.org/news.
To follow AHAF on Twitter and Facebook
visit www.ahaf.org/connect.