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The Canadian Multi-ethnic Research on Aging (CAMERA) Study: Study design and participant characteristics

Marawi, T.; Rai, H.; Kumar, R.; Vandeloo, K. L.; Yep, R.; Boshmaf, S. Z.; Zhang, A.; Gopinath, G.; Chen, S.-M.; Malhotra, S.; Nyman, A. J.; Alexander, M. W.; Splinter, T.; Perri, L. X.; Munoz, D. P.; Swardfager, W.; Ryan, J. D.; Black, S. E.; Goubran, M.; Rabin, J. S.

2025-11-02 neurology
10.1101/2025.10.31.25338992 medRxiv
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INTRODUCTIONSouth Asian and Chinese individuals are the largest and fastest-growing ethnoracial groups in Canada, yet they remain underrepresented in dementia research. To address this gap, we established the CAnadian Multi-Ethnic Research on Aging (CAMERA) study. METHODSCAMERA is a longitudinal observational study conducted in Toronto, Canada, enrolling 300 adults aged 55-85 who self-identify as South Asian, Chinese, or non-Hispanic White (NHW). Participants complete in-person visits at baseline, Year 3, and Year 5, which include clinical and cognitive assessments, brain MRI, and blood biomarkers. Annual remote questionnaires track health and lifestyle. RESULTSAmong 200 participants, vascular and metabolic profiles differed across groups. South Asian and Chinese participants reported greater cognitive concerns than NHW participants and had lower MoCA scores, driven primarily by language-heavy and culturally dependent items. Eye-tracking measures did not differ across groups. DISCUSSIONCAMERA provides a deep phenotyping framework to investigate dementia risk and resilience in Asian Canadians.

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