Early-stage detection of Alzheimer’s in the blood

Authored by news.rub.de and submitted by mvea
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Using current techniques, Alzheimer’s disease, the most frequent cause of dementia, can only be detected once the typical plaques have formed in the brain. At this point, therapy seems no longer possible. However, the first changes caused by Alzheimer’s take place on the protein level up to 20 years sooner. A two-tier method developed at Ruhr-Universität Bochum (RUB) can help detect the disease at a much earlier stage. The researchers from Bochum published their report in the March 2019 edition of the journal “Alzheimer’s and Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment and Disease Monitoring”.

“This has paved the way for early-stage therapy approaches, where the as yet inefficient drugs on which we had pinned our hopes may prove effective,” says Professor Klaus Gerwert from the Department of Biophysics at RUB.

In Alzheimer’s patients, the amyloid beta protein folds incorrectly due to pathological changes long before the first symptoms occur. A team of researchers headed by Klaus Gerwert successfully diagnosed this misfolding using a simple blood test; as a result, the disease can be detected approximately eight years before the first clinical symptoms occur. The test wasn’t suitable for clinical applications however: it did detect 71 per cent of Alzheimer’s cases in symptomless stages, but at the same time provided false positive diagnoses for nine per cent of the study participants. In order to increase the number of correctly identified Alzheimer’s cases and to reduce the number of false positive diagnoses, the researchers poured a lot of time and effort into optimising the test.

As a result, they have now introduced the two-tier diagnostic method. To this end, they use the original blood test to identify high-risk individuals. Subsequently, they add a dementia-specific biomarker, namely tau protein, to run further tests with those test participants whose Alzheimer’s diagnosis was positive in the first step. If both biomarkers show a positive result, there is a high likelihood of Alzheimer’s disease. “Through the combination of both analyses, 87 of 100 Alzheimer’s patients were correctly identified in our study,” summarises Klaus Gerwert. “And we reduced the number of false positive diagnoses in healthy subjects to 3 of 100. The second analysis is carried out in cerebrospinal fluid that is extracted from the spinal cord.

“Now, new clinical studies with test participants in very early stages of the disease can be launched,” points out Gerwert. He is hoping that the existing therapeutic antibodies will still have an effect. “Recently, two major promising studies have failed, especially Crenezumab and Aducanumab – not least because it had probably already been too late by the time therapy was taken up. The new test opens up a new therapy window.”

“Once amyloid plaques have formed, it seems that the disease can no longer be treated,” says Dr. Andreas Nabers, head of the research group and co-developer of the Alzheimer’s sensor. “If our attempts to arrest the progression of Alzheimer’s fail, it will put a lot of strain on our society.”

Sensor test is simple and robust

The blood test has been upgraded to a fully automated process at the RUB Department of Biophysics. “The sensor is easy to use, robust when it comes to fluctuation in concentration of biomarkers, and standardised,” explains Andreas Nabers. “We are now conducting in-depth research to detect the second biomarker, namely tau protein, in the blood, in order to supply a solely blood-based test in future,” concludes Klaus Gerwert.

Original publication Andreas Nabers, Henning Hafermann, Jens Wiltfang, Klaus Gerwert: Aβ and tau structure-based biomarkers for a blood- and CSF-based two-step recruitment strategy to identify patients with dementia due to Alzheimer's disease, in: Alzheimer's and Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment and Disease Monitoring, 2019, DOI: 10.1016/j.dadm.2019.01.008

BasicwyhtBench on May 6th, 2019 at 14:47 UTC »

Let's be honest, if I get a positive result, I would please like the option to live out my days how I want and then end my life with assisted suicide. Ethuinze me please before I forget who I am and those around me struggle with who I have become.

bill_tampa on May 6th, 2019 at 14:16 UTC »

If the incidence of Alzheimer's disease is about 4% by age 90, a test done before diagnostic clinical symptoms were present that had a sensitivity of 90% and specificity of 97% (stated for this two-stage test) would have a false-positive rate of 3%. This means that the predictive value of a positive test would be 55.5% (if I'm filling out the 4x4 square properly!). This means there is still a 45% chance that a "screening" positive test is falsely positive. I don't know if this is 'good enough' to serve as the basis for clinical treatment or life-planning, but it is certainly a step in the right direction!

mvea on May 6th, 2019 at 11:15 UTC »

The title of the post is a copy and paste from the title and third paragraph of the linked academic press release here:

Early-stage detection of Alzheimer’s in the blood

A team of researchers headed by Klaus Gerwert successfully diagnosed this misfolding using a simple blood test; as a result, the disease can be detected approximately eight years before the first clinical symptoms occur.

And from the abstract below:

Result

Within a first diagnostic screening step, the structure-based Aβ blood biomarker supports AD identification with a sensitivity of 90%. In a second diagnostic validation step, the combined use of the structure-based CSF biomarkers Aβ and tau excluded false-positive cases which offers an overall specificity of 97%.

Journal Reference:

Andreas Nabers, Henning Hafermann, Jens Wiltfang, Klaus Gerwert.

Aβ and tau structure-based biomarkers for a blood- and CSF-based two-step recruitment strategy to identify patients with dementia due to Alzheimer's disease.

Alzheimer's & Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment & Disease Monitoring, 2019; 11: 257

DOI: 10.1016/j.dadm.2019.01.008

Link: https://www.dadm.alzdem.com/article/S2352-8729(19)30011-9/fulltext

Abstract

Introduction

Alzheimer's disease (AD) diagnosis requires invasive CSF analysis or expensive brain imaging. Therefore, a minimal-invasive reliable and cost-effective blood test is requested to power large clinical AD trials at reduced screening failure.

Methods

We applied an immuno-infrared sensor to measure the amyloid-β (Aβ) and tau secondary structure distribution in plasma and CSF as structure-based biomarkers for AD (61 disease controls, 39 AD cases).

Result

Within a first diagnostic screening step, the structure-based Aβ blood biomarker supports AD identification with a sensitivity of 90%. In a second diagnostic validation step, the combined use of the structure-based CSF biomarkers Aβ and tau excluded false-positive cases which offers an overall specificity of 97%.

Discussion

The primary Aβ-based blood biomarker funnels individuals with suspected AD for subsequent validation of the diagnosis by structure-based combined analysis of the CSF biomarkers Aβ and tau. Our novel two-step recruitment strategy substantiates the diagnosis of AD with a likelihood of 29.