Horizon 2020 (2014 - 2020)

Common mechanisms and pathways in Stroke and Alzheimer's disease: CoSTREAM

Last update: Dec 10, 2020 Last update: Dec 10, 2020

Details

Locations:Austria, France, Germany, Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, UK
Start Date:Dec 1, 2015
End Date:Nov 30, 2020
Contract value: EUR 5,100,372
Sectors:Education, Health, Research
Education, Health, Research
Categories:Grants
Date posted:Dec 10, 2020

Associated funding

Associated experts

Description

Programme(s): H2020-EU.3.1.1. - Understanding health, wellbeing and disease
Topic(s): PHC-03-2015 - Understanding common mechanisms of diseases and their relevance in co-morbidities
Call for proposal: H2020-PHC-2015-two-stage
Funding Scheme: RIA - Research and Innovation action

Grant agreement ID: 667375

Objective
Common mechanisms and pathways in Stroke and Alzheimer's disease.
It has long been recognized that stroke and (Alzheimer’s Disease) AD often co-occur and have an overlapping pathogenesis. As such, these two diseases are not considered fellow travelers, but rather partners in crime. This multidisciplinary consortium includes epidemiologists, geneticists, radiologists, neurologists with a longstanding track-record on the etiology of stroke and AD.
This project aims to improve our understanding of the co-occurrence of stroke and AD. An essential concept of our proposal is that stroke and AD are sequential diseases that have overlapping pathyphysiological mechanisms in addition to shared risk factors. We will particularly focus on these common mechanisms and disentangle when and how these mechanisms diverge into causing either stroke, or AD, or both. Another important concept is that mechanisms under study will not only include the known pathways of ischemic vasculopathy and CAA, but we will explore and unravel novel mechanisms linking stroke and AD. We will do so by exploiting our vast international network in order to link various big datasets and by incorporating novel analytical strategies with emerging technologies in the field of genomics, metabolomics, and brain MR-imaging.

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