NCT07127510 · RECRUITING

Brain NAD in Alzheimer's Disease

This observational study is measuring NAD levels in the brains of people with and without Alzheimer's disease using a non-invasive MRI-based imaging technique called magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Participants get two brain scans eight months apart. The researchers want to know whether NAD, a molecule involved in cellular energy, is lower in Alzheimer's-affected brains. This is an observational study, meaning no drug or treatment is given — researchers are watching and measuring, not testing a therapy.

You may qualify if

  • Participants are able to come to the Florida Atlantic University Clinical Research Unit, are verbal and ambulatory.
  • Age 65 to 80 included.
  • People with Alzheimer's disease (AD): AD diagnosis established by the person's physician according to the following criteria: clinical diagnosis AND either positive amyloid PET-scan or FDA-approved positive CSF or blood test.

You're excluded if

  • Under the age of 65 or over the age of 80.
  • Advanced dementia such that the person would require sedation for undergoing an MRI scan.
  • Receiving anti-amyloid intravenous treatments Leqembi or Kinsula.
  • Having an MRI-incompatible pacemaker or other MRI-incompatible hardware (e.g. comprising a metallic part).
  • Having a history of seizures.
  • Working at night.
  • Having cancer or having been diagnosed with cancer within the last 5 years (excluding superficial squameous or basal cell cancer).
  • People with no AD: MoCA test result lower than 26.

The sponsor's own eligibility wording, lightly reformatted. The study team makes the final eligibility decision — worth discussing with your doctor.

Eligibility criteria as of 2026-03-24

View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov

All APOE4 clinical trials