Conference Coverage

P-tau217 differentiates Alzheimer’s disease from other neurodegenerative conditions


 

FROM AAIC 2020

Potential game changer?

Commenting on the study, Howard Fillit, MD, founding executive director and chief science officer of the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, noted his enthusiasm for the test. “This tau blood test will be a real game changer, advancing clinical care and research,” said Dr. Fillit, who was not involved in the research.

“This is a real breakthrough: a simple and accessible blood test that can diagnose Alzheimer’s disease better than the more costly and invasive methods currently available like PET scans and cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers,” he said.

The P-tau217 blood test “is like the equivalent of the cholesterol test for heart disease, but for Alzheimer’s disease,” Dr. Fillit added.

As previously reported, another study presented at AAIC 2020 compared P-tau217 with P-tau181 to determine which could best identify individuals with Alzheimer’s disease. Results showed that, although the two biomarkers were similar overall, P-tau217 had a slight edge in terms of accuracy.

The study by Reiman et al. was funded by the Swedish Research Council, the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation, and the Swedish Alzheimer Foundation. Dr. Hansson reported receiving grants from Roche, Biogen, and Pfizer, and receiving nonfinancial support from GE Healthcare, AVID Radiopharmaceuticals, and Euroimmun. Dr. Reiman has received grants from Roche/Roche Diagnostics and received personal fees from Alkahest, Alzheon, Aural Analytics, Denali, Green Valley, MagQ, Takeda/Zinfandel, and United Neuroscience. He is also a cofounder of AlzPath, which aims to further develop P-tau217 and fluid biomarkers; holds a patent owned by Banner Health for a strategy to use biomarkers to accelerate evaluation of Alzheimer prevention therapies; and is a principal investigator of prevention trials that include research agreements with Genentech/Roche and Novartis/Amgen, PET studies that include research agreements with Avid/Lilly, and several National Institute of Health–supported research studies. Dr. Fillit reported no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

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