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Alzheimer’s patients often had low cerebral amyloid

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APOE genotyping can inform diagnosis

“Thoughtful use of biomarkers will help improve diagnostic accuracy of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), and advances in tau PET imaging will help investigate the role of tau pathology in cognitively normal and impaired elderly individuals. Distinguishing between AD and non-AD pathologies will become increasingly important as more targeted treatments become available for intervention in the preclinical and early clinical stages of AD,” wrote Dr. Stephen Salloway and Dr. Reisa Sperling.

“The collective findings cited herein provide a strong rationale for using amyloid biomarkers (PET and cerebrospinal fluid) in AD clinical trials to recruit more homogeneous populations most likely to respond to amyloid-based treatments. The question we will ultimately face is when should APOE genotyping and amyloid PET be performed in the clinic. A consensus panel of the Alzheimer’s Association and the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging has developed recommendations (Alzheimers Dement. 2013;9[1]:e1-16) to guide the appropriate use of amyloid PET in clinical practice. Testing for APOE is not included in the appropriate use criteria recommendations. Given that APOE4 carrier status is a strong predictor of amyloid and AD pathology, it may be prudent to consider a hierarchical approach to amyloid biomarkers based on APOE genotyping,” they said.

Dr. Salloway is a neurologist at Brown University in Providence, R.I. Dr. Sperling is a neurologist at Harvard University in Boston. Both reported financial relationships with a number of pharmaceutical companies. These comments were taken from their accompanying editorial (JAMA Neurol. 2015 Aug 24. doi: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2015.1804).


 

FROM JAMA NEUROLOGY

References

One in four patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease dementia had only scant evidence of neuritic amyloid plaques, and the finding was almost three times more common among apolipoprotein E epsilon-4 noncarriers than in carriers, researchers reported online in JAMA Neurology.

“These findings suggest that a nonamyloidogenic variant resembling the clinical phenotype of Alzheimer disease may be more common than previously expected … particularly in APOE4 [apolipoprotein E epsilon-4] noncarriers,” said Sarah Monsell of the University of Washington’s National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center, Seattle, and her associates. Such patients might not respond to treatments targeting fibrillar or soluble amyloid-beta, the researchers said.

©Jana Blašková/thinkstockphotos.com

Their study explored clinical and neuropathologic data from 100 APOE4 noncarriers and 100 APOE4 carriers who were diagnosed with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease (AD) at their last visit to an AD center. All patients had a Mini-Mental State Examination score of 16-26 and died within 24 months of their last evaluation (JAMA Neurol. 2015 Aug 24. doi: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2015.1721).

Fully 37% of APOE4 noncarriers had scant postmortem evidence of amyloid-beta peptide plaques, compared with only 13% of carriers, the investigators reported. Also, 45% of patients with sparse neuritic plaques had extensive (Braak stages III or IV) neurofibrillary degeneration, and most others met neuropathologic criteria for diseases related to dementia, including vascular disease, Lewy body disease, hippocampal sclerosis, frontotemporal lobar degeneration, and tangle-only dementia. “These findings support the results of recent PET imaging studies suggesting that many participants who meet clinical criteria for mild to moderate Alzheimer dementia do not appear to have high levels of amyloid-beta accumulation in the cerebral cortex,” the researchers wrote.

The National Institute on Aging and the Arizona Alzheimer’s Consortium funded the study. Two coauthors reported financial relationships with GE Healthcare, Avid Radiopharmaceuticals, Navidea Biopharmaceuticals, and Merck.

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