Progress is seen on blood test for Alzheimer's
Scientists are closing in on a long-sought goal: A blood test to
screen people for Alzheimer's disease.
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Taking a blood sample from a patient. |
An experimental test did a good job of indicating how much of the
telltale Alzheimer's plaque lurks in people's brains, Australian
researchers reported. If the test proves accurate in larger studies, it
could offer a way to check people having memory problems to see who
needs more definitive testing for the disease.
Many blood tests are being developed and a few are used in research
settings now, but only the Australian one has been validated against
brain scans and other accepted diagnostic tests with good accuracy in
large groups of people, said Maria Carrillo, senior director of medical
and scientific relations for the Alzheimer's Association.
The results, reported at the Alzheimer's Association International
Conference in France, "give us hope that we may be able to use a blood
test in the near future," although that doesn't mean next year, she
said.
More than 5.4 million Americans and 35 million people worldwide have
Alzheimer's, the most common form of dementia. It has no cure and drugs
only temporarily ease symptoms. Finding it early allows patients and
their families to prepare, and ruling it out could lead to diagnosing a
more treatable cause of symptoms, such as sleep problems.
Brain scans can show signs of Alzheimer's - sticky clumps of a
protein called beta amyloid - a decade or more before it causes memory
and thinking problems, but scans are too expensive and impractical for
routine use. Doctors and patients need simple ways to screen people for
the disease.
Samantha Burnham and others at Australia's national science agency,
CSIRO, working with several universities, used a long-running study of
more than 1,100 people - some healthy, some impaired - to develop the
blood test.
They started with blood samples from 273 study participants and
identified nine hormones and proteins that seemed most predictive of
amyloid levels in the brain. A cutoff level was set for what was
considered high.
"The belief is that people above that point will go on to get
Alzheimer's disease, and the lag is about eight to 10 years," Burnham
explained.
When researchers used the nine-marker blood test on these same
participants, they found that it separated healthy people from those
with mild cognitive impairment or Alzheimer's as verified by their brain
scans. The test correctly identified 83 percent of people with high
amyloid levels and correctly ruled out 85 percent of people without this
condition.
"That's pretty high," the Alzheimer's Association's Carrillo said of
the test's accuracy.
More importantly, she said, the Australian researchers validated the
test's accuracy in two additional groups: the other 817 folks in the
Australian study and 74 people in a big US-led study aimed at finding
novel Alzheimer's disease biomarkers.
The test performed well in those situations, too, Burnham said.
CSIRO has patented the test and is talking with major companies about
making it commercially available.
"It sounds like the Australians do have good clinical data" and that
the markers they are testing for track with cases of the disease, said
Creighton Phelps, a neuroscientist with the US National Institute on
Aging. The next step is wider validation work and ensuring it can be
standardised to give reliable results regardless of what lab or doctor
would use it, he said. -AP
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