Brain
scan, cerebrospinal fluid analysis may help predict Alzheimer's
By
Michael Purdy
Nov.
15, 2005 — A combination of brain scanning with a new imaging agent and cerebrospinal
fluid (CSF) analysis has left neuroscientists encouraged that they may finally
be moving toward techniques for diagnosing Alzheimer's disease before its clinical
symptoms become apparent.
"When
clinical symptoms start, the disease process has already been at work in the
patient for many years and possibly even decades," explains Anne Fagan
Niven, Ph.D., research associate professor of neurology at Washington University
School of Medicine in St. Louis. "Up to 30 percent of neurons in vulnerable
areas are already dead, and you can't get them back. So finding markers that
can help us identify patients prior to symptoms is really our big push now."
With
colleagues Mark Mintun, M.D., professor of radiology, and David Holtzman, M.D.,
the Andrew B. and Gretchen P. Jones Professor and head of the Department of
Neurology, Fagan studied a group of 24 people that included individuals diagnosed
with very mild and mild Alzheimer's disease, and cognitively normal subjects.
As expected, in patients with cognitive impairments, believed to be attributable
to Alzheimer's disease, researchers found low CSF levels of amyloid beta 42
(A-beta 42), the principal ingredient of the brain plaques that are characteristic
of Alzheimer's disease. In the same individuals, brain scans with a new imaging
agent that reveals the presence of amyloid plaques in the brain were positive.
What
scientists didn't anticipate was that three cognitively normal subjects would
have both low CSF levels of A-beta 42 and positive results from the brain scans.
Fagan stressed that although this aspect of their findings was very intriguing,
it doesn't prove that the three normal subjects will one day develop clinical
Alzheimer's disease.
"For
now, definitive diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease still cannot be made until
autopsy," she says. "It's going to take a number of years for us to
fully assess these results, because all we can do now is follow the participants
closely to see if they eventually develop Alzheimer's dementia."
Fagan
presents the results of the study at 10:15 a.m. on Nov. 15 at this year's annual
meeting of the Society for Neuroscience in Washington, D.C. The study will also
appear in an upcoming issue of Annals of Neurology.
Many
prior studies have found that A-beta 42 levels drop in the cerebrospinal fluid
of Alzheimer's disease patients. A-beta 42 is naturally produced in the brain,
and researchers suspect that the creation of amyloid plaques may be linked to
breakdowns of the processes that degrade or normally clear A-beta 42 from the
brain via the CSF and the bloodstream.
However,
natural variations occur in CSF A-beta 42 levels in healthy subjects, and the
amount this level drops in Alzheimer's patients also varies. And that left no
distinct level scientists could identify as a diagnostic marker characteristic
of Alzheimer's disease.
Fagan
wanted to see if useful distinctions could be made by combining data on CSF
A-beta 42 levels with results from brain scans with a new imaging agent, PIB
(for Pittsburgh compound B). Developed by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh,
PIB temporarily sticks to amyloid plaques in the brain but washes clean in 30
to 60 minutes. Scientists can detect this sticking with a PET scanner.
Using
PIB data available from ongoing studies of research volunteers at the Memory
and Aging Project at the Alzheimer's Disease Research Center at Washington University,
Fagan compared PIB scan results and levels of CSF A-beta 42.
"When
I realized that everyone who was PIB positive also had lower CSF A-beta 42 levels,
I had one of those 'aha!' moments that makes it so exciting to be a scientist,"
Fagan says.
Other
CSF factors, such as levels of another form of A-beta and of a molecule found
in the brain cell tangles created by Alzheimer's disease, did not correlate
with positive PIB scan results.
"The
hope is that 10-20 years from now, we'll give people a PIB scan, draw and analyze
their CSF, and combine that with other factors to get a global score for their
personal risk of Alzheimer's disease," Fagan says. "We have disease-modifying
treatments on the way to clinical trials right now, and tests that can help
us detect Alzheimer's earlier will both help us put those treatments to better
use and assess the results they produce in patients."
Fagan
AM, Mintun MA, Mach RH, Dence CS, Shah AR, LaRossa G, Spinner ML, Klunk WE,
Mathis CA, Morris JC, Holtzman DM. Correspondence between in vivo amyloid imaging
and CSF A-beta 42 levels in humans: implications for antecedent biomarkers of
Alzheimer's disease. Society for Neuroscience annual meeting, November 15, 2005.
Funding
from the National Institute on Aging supported this research.
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