Why U of U Health Is Making Its $21.6M Dementia Study Data Public

by Chris Nichols
| Mar 11, 2026

The big idea: When major research findings are shared openly, discoveries happen faster and reach farther than any single lab could achieve alone.

What’s happening: University of Utah Health is committing to make all data from its $21.6 million NIH study on blood pressure and dementia publicly available once analysis is complete in early 2027.

  • The study involves nearly 40,000 blood samples from the landmark SPRINT trial, measuring biomarkers that reveal how hypertension interacts with both vascular brain health and Alzheimer’s pathology.
  • Dr. Adam Bress and his team are partnering with Banner Alzheimer’s Institute to analyze the samples over the next two years.

Why it matters: Open data accelerates scientific progress in ways that benefit everyone.

  • Students in Dr. Bress’s lab and his collaborators’ labs will work directly on the project from beginning to end, gaining hands-on research experience.
  • Once publicly available, students and researchers from across the world will be able to use this data for dissertations, new studies, and follow-up discoveries without waiting years for secondary publications.
  • It multiplies the number of scientists working on the same problem, increasing the speed and volume of breakthroughs.
  • Publicly funded research should serve the public, and open data ensures taxpayer investments deliver maximum return.

The bottom line: Invest in discovery. Share the findings. Let the next generation build on what you learned.