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Acceptable performance of blood biomarker tests of amyloid pathology — recommendations from the Global CEO Initiative on Alzheimer’s Disease

Nature Reviews Neurology, ISSN: 1759-4766, Vol: 20, Issue: 7, Page: 426-439
2024
  • 42
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 118
    Captures
  • 91
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    42
  • Captures
    118
  • Mentions
    91
    • News Mentions
      91
      • 91

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Labcorp Launches First-Of-Its-Kind Immunoassay To Accelerate Path To Diagnosis Of Alzheimer's Disease

Labcorp's pTau-217/Beta Amyloid 42 Ratio blood test meets the performance criteria to confirm amyloid pathology consistent with Alzheimer's disease Burlington, ON /PRNewswire/ - Labcorp (NYSE:

Article Description

Anti-amyloid treatments for early symptomatic Alzheimer disease have recently become clinically available in some countries, which has greatly increased the need for biomarker confirmation of amyloid pathology. Blood biomarker (BBM) tests for amyloid pathology are more acceptable, accessible and scalable than amyloid PET or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) tests, but have highly variable levels of performance. The Global CEO Initiative on Alzheimer’s Disease convened a BBM Workgroup to consider the minimum acceptable performance of BBM tests for clinical use. Amyloid PET status was identified as the reference standard. For use as a triaging test before subsequent confirmatory tests such as amyloid PET or CSF tests, the BBM Workgroup recommends that a BBM test has a sensitivity of ≥90% with a specificity of ≥85% in primary care and ≥75–85% in secondary care depending on the availability of follow-up testing. For use as a confirmatory test without follow-up tests, a BBM test should have performance equivalent to that of CSF tests — a sensitivity and specificity of ~90%. Importantly, the predictive values of all biomarker tests vary according to the pre-test probability of amyloid pathology and must be interpreted in the complete clinical context. Use of BBM tests that meet these performance standards could enable more people to receive an accurate and timely Alzheimer disease diagnosis and potentially benefit from new treatments.

Bibliographic Details

Schindler, Suzanne E; Galasko, Douglas; Pereira, Ana C; Rabinovici, Gil D; Salloway, Stephen; Suárez-Calvet, Marc; Khachaturian, Ara S; Mielke, Michelle M; Udeh-Momoh, Chi; Weiss, Joan; Batrla, Richard; Bozeat, Sasha; Dwyer, John R; Holzapfel, Drew; Jones, Daryl Rhys; Murray, James F; Partrick, Katherine A; Scholler, Emily; Vradenburg, George; Young, Dylan; Algeciras-Schimnich, Alicia; Aubrecht, Jiri; Braunstein, Joel B; Hendrix, James; Hu, Yan Helen; Mattke, Soeren; Monane, Mark; Reilly, David; Somers, Elizabeth; Teunissen, Charlotte E; Shobin, Eli; Vanderstichele, Hugo; Weiner, Michael W; Wilson, David; Hansson, Oskar

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Medicine; Neuroscience

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