Blood tests needed for widespread Alzheimer's diagnosis on the way
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[October 12, 2023]
By Deena Beasley
(Reuters) - Blood tests for Alzheimer's are needed to more widely
diagnose the brain-wasting disease and understand its prevalence, but it
will be another couple of years before they become an everyday tool,
medical experts and company executives say.
Blood testing is initially likely to be used to rule out Alzheimer's,
with positive results signaling the need for more advanced diagnostics.
Several Alzheimer's blood tests are in the works – and one is already
being sold to consumers – but none have been established as accurate,
formally approved by regulators or reimbursed by insurers. Some are
being used to help screen participants enrolling in clinical trials of
Alzheimer's treatments. Alzheimer's, which gradually destroys memory and
thinking skills, is characterized by changes in the brain including
buildup of amyloid beta plaques and tau tangles that result in loss of
neurons responsible for transmitting information.
Currently, people who might benefit from Leqembi, the new Alzheimer's
drug from Eisai and Biogen, need those changes diagnosed through
cognitive assessment and a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) test, which
requires an invasive lumbar puncture, or an expensive PET brain scan
that may not be reimbursed by health insurers.
Even when covered, CSF and PET testing can be hard to access in some
parts of the country. Researchers have been working for years on blood
tests for Alzheimer's that can replicate these diagnostic tools. But
there is still debate over which biomarkers, or proteins in the blood,
signal the presence of amyloid and tau in the brain.
They also say more work is needed to understand the relationship of such
biomarkers with race, underlying medical conditions and other factors.
The need for blood tests has become more pressing since the FDA approved
Leqembi in July. It is currently reviewing a similar drug, donanemab,
from Eli Lilly.
Dr. Sarah Kremen, director of the neurobehavior program at Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center in Los Angeles, said amyloid on its own is an unreliable
marker for Alzheimer's since many people accumulate brain deposits of
the protein as they age, but do not develop dementia. Blood tests that
measure the right combination of biomarkers will eventually become the
standard for diagnosing Alzheimer's, she said, "but right now, they are
not quite ready for prime time."
NEW COMBINATION TEST ARRIVES
Labcorp on Wednesday began offering to physicians a blood test it says
measures markers for amyloid, tau and neurodegeneration with a list
price of $626. In July, Quest Diagnostics launched the first
direct-to-consumer blood test for Alzheimer's, which costs $399 and aims
to detect abnormal levels of amyloid. Data on its accuracy has not been
published. Cedars and other neurology centers took the unusual step of
issuing strongly-worded cautions about such consumer tests for people
who do not have risk factors or symptoms of Alzheimer's, saying they are
best used in conjunction with medical guidance.
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A view shows tests for patients suffering from Alzheimer's disease
at the Memory Centre Department of Readaptation and Geriatrics of
the University Hospital (HUG), in Geneva, Switzerland, June 6, 2023.
REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
"The blood biomarker is a useful
screening tool at first, but additional information is needed," said
Eliezer Masliah, director of the National Institute on Aging
neuroscience division, part of the U.S. National Institutes of
Health. Eisai has a collaboration with C2N Diagnostics to develop
evidence supporting the use of blood-based Alzheimer's testing.
Michael Irizarry, head of clinical research at Eisai's neurology
division, said he expects the transition to blood-based Alzheimer's
diagnostics to happen over the next two years. "Blood tests are
progressing quite rapidly," he said.
C2N, which has published and presented its data at medical
conferences, recently began offering a $1,450 updated version of its
blood test that measures amyloid and tau. Eli Lilly is working with
Quanterix on an experimental tau biomarker blood test, and has
partnered with Roche to develop a test measuring blood levels of a
different tau protein as well as a gene associated with Alzheimer's
risk.
Bruce Jordan, an executive with Roche Diagnostics, said the company
expects to have results from a large trial and file for U.S.
approval of its Elecsys Amyloid Plasma Panel in 2025.
Accurate blood tests are expected to help identify which dementia
patients actually have Alzheimer’s, the most common but not the only
cause of dementia.
The Alzheimer's Association estimates that 6.7 million Americans
have the disease, but acknowledges that the number could be 30%
lower if biological testing is used.
Another analysis from RAND found that the U.S. age-adjusted
prevalence of dementia fell by a about a third to 8.5% between 2000
and 2016, possibly due to more education, less smoking and better
heart health care. "There is a real possibility that the field
changes as real world evidence is collected," said Russ Paulsen,
chief operating officer at patient advocacy group
UsAgainstAlzheimers.
"When there are widely available, scalable, sensitive and specific
blood tests it will be an absolute game changer for Alzheimer's
patients."
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(Reporting By Deena Beasley; editing by Caroline Humer and Bill
Berkrot)
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