TRC-LATE Study

For Researchers

Study design, cohort goals, eligibility pathways, measures, and site information for researchers, clinicians, and collaborators interested in TRC-LATE.

Study overview

TRC-LATE is a multi-site, NIH-funded observational cohort study designed to improve detection of Limbic-Predominant Age-Related TDP-43 Encephalopathy and support readiness for future LATE clinical trials. The study builds on Alzheimer Disease Research Center infrastructure across five academic medical centers.

420

Target discovery cohort participants

5

Participating research sites

5

Years of follow-up

NIA

Funded by the National Institute on Aging

Research aims

TRC-LATE pursues three connected scientific goals to advance diagnosis, biomarker development, and trial readiness.

AIM 1

Validate diagnostic markers

Evaluate neuropsychological and imaging markers associated with LATE, including disproportionate memory impairment, hippocampal atrophy on MRI, and FDG-PET hypometabolism patterns.

AIM 2

Discover novel biomarkers

Study candidate biomarkers, including plasma phosphorylated TDP-43, hippocampal asymmetry, digital speech markers, and composite risk scores to predict LATE neuropathology during life.

AIM 3

Advance trial readiness

Use recruitment science, surveys, and optional interviews to identify barriers and facilitators to participation in future LATE and combined LATE/Alzheimer’s clinical trials.

Eligibility pathways

TRC-LATE recruits older adults through participating Alzheimer Disease Research Centers. Enrollment is organized through two pathways.

Standard pathway

Age requirement: age 85 or older.

Cognitive status: cognitively unimpaired with subjective memory complaints, cognitively unimpaired with evidence of hippocampal atrophy on MRI, mild cognitive impairment with amnestic features, or dementia with an amnestic predominant syndrome.

Amyloid status pathway

Age requirement: age 75 or older.

Additional requirements: cognitively impaired with mild cognitive impairment or dementia, and amyloid-negative based on existing PET or fluid biomarker results.

Because LATE can currently be confirmed only through neuropathological examination, consent to post-mortem brain examination is required for all participants.

What participation involves

The study is designed for longitudinal follow-up with annual in-person visits and selected remote assessments.

Clinical and cognitive testing

Annually. Standardized clinical assessments and neuropsychological testing using the UDS battery plus FTLD module assessments.

Blood collection

Annually. Plasma biomarkers, inflammatory markers, and DNA for genomic analyses.

MRI brain imaging

Annually. Multi-sequence MRI to track brain structure over time.

FDG-PET imaging

Every 2 years. FDG-PET scans measure brain glucose metabolism and support characterization of neurodegenerative patterns.

Remote cognitive testing

Every 6 months. Ecological momentary assessment includes short cognitive tasks completed at home.

Trial planning and surveys

Annually. Surveys and optional interviews help researchers design effective and inclusive future LATE studies.

Study sites & leadership

TRC-LATE is conducted across five academic medical centers, coordinated by the University of California, Irvine.

University of California, Irvine

Coordinating site

University of California, San Diego

Participating site

University of Southern California

Participating site

University of Washington

Participating site

Oregon Health & Science University

Participating site

Funded by:
National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health

Study period:
September 2025 – June 2030

Research questions or referrals

For site questions, referral discussions, or collaboration inquiries, contact the TRC-LATE study team.

Contact Us