Data Sharing

Data Sharing

3/16/18 OASIS-3 is released! http://www.oasis-brains.org/ Over 2000 MRI scans in over 1000 research participants from the Knight Alzheimer's Disease Research Center at Washington University available as an open access data set.

For all of our research projects, both the source imaging data (DICOM) and processed variables are available for sharing with both internal and external investigators. All MRI and PET data is based upon FreeSurfer segmentation. For a visual example of FreeSurfer regions, go to http://www.frontiersin.org/files/Articles/33392/fnins-06-00171-HTML/image_m/fnins-06-00171-g001.jpg

    • MRI
      • Imaging for healthy aging and Alzheimer disease includes longitudinal MRI in an active combined cohort of over 800 participants from the Knight ADRC, from age 45 to over 100 years of age. Standard protocols include volumetric, DTI, ASL, and rs-fcMRI, as well as standard clinical sequences to assess for microhemorrhages and white matter hyperintensities.
      • Brain tumor studies include structural MRI and metabolic MRI using MROMI and qBOLD in the setting of glioma and post-radiation change
    • PET
      • For a large subset of the sporadic Alzheimr disease cohort at Washington University, cross-sectional and longitudinal amyloid imaging with [11C]-Pittsburgh Compound B (PiB) PET is available. More recently, we have begun a transition to [18F]-florbetapir (AV45) amyloid imaging. We have also acquired over 100 AV-1451 (T807) tau PET scans.
      • A data set of 100 scans with PiB and AV45 in the same participants (within a 2 week window) is available for sharing.
      • Brain tumor studies include structural MRI and metabolic PET using FDG and [15O} in the setting of glioma and post-radiation change. Brain tumor studies with FDOPA PET.
    • Post-processing
      • Standard extracted variables on deposit include FreeSurfer 5.0 QC'd and processed hippocampal and structural segmentations for over 1700 MRI imaging sessions. Standardized PET processing includes binding potentials and SUVRs, with and without partial volume corrections, 800 processed PiB PET scans for amyloid.

For further details of the protocols or cohorts, please contact Russ Hornbeck, russ@npg.wustl.edu

Data access for Alzheimer's disease studies can be requested online


Acknowledgments

We are grateful to our participants for their time and commitment to fighting diseases of the central nervous system.