Discriminative Accuracy of Plasma Phospho-tau217 for Alzheimer Disease vs Other Neurodegenerative Disorders
Lund University · Skåne University Hospital · +18 more institutions
Abstract
There are limitations in current diagnostic testing approaches for Alzheimer disease (AD).
To examine plasma tau phosphorylated at threonine 217 (P-tau217) as a diagnostic biomarker for AD. Design, Setting, and Participants: Three cross-sectional cohorts: an Arizona-based neuropathology cohort (cohort 1), including 34 participants with AD and 47 without AD (dates of enrollment, May 2007-January 2019); the Swedish BioFINDER-2 cohort (cohort 2), including cognitively unimpaired participants (n = 301) and clinically diagnosed patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) (n = 178), AD dementia (n = 121), and other neurodegenerative diseases (n = 99) (April 2017-September 2019); and a Colombian autosomal-dominant AD kindred (cohort 3), including 365 PSEN1 E280A mutation carriers and 257 mutation noncarriers (December 2013-February 2017). Exposures: Plasma P-tau217. Main Outcomes and Measures: Primary outcome was the discriminative accuracy of plasma P-tau217 for AD (clinical or neuropathological diagnosis). Secondary outcome was the association with tau pathology (determined using neuropathology or positron emission tomography [PET]).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 98.18
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 45
Authors
22- SPSebastian Palmqvist
Lund University, Skåne University Hospital
- SJShorena Janelidze
Lund University
- YTYakeel T. Quiroz
Universidad de Antioquia, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard University
- HZHenrik Zetterberg
UK Dementia Research Institute, University of Gothenburg, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, University College London
- FLFrancisco Lopera
Universidad de Antioquia
Topics & keywords
- Cohort
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
- Neuropathology
- Hazard ratio
- Dementia
- Biomarker
- Oncology
- Reduced inequalities