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Blood test for Alzheimer’s disease comes to the clinic


 

The first blood test to detect the presence of amyloid, a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease, is now available for clinical use, according to C2N Diagnostics, the company behind the test’s development. The availability of the noninvasive, easily administered test is being called a milestone in the early detection and diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease.

The blood test “introduces a new option for patients, families, and the medical community that have eagerly awaited innovative tools to address Alzheimer’s troubling problems,” Joel B. Braunstein, MD, MBA, CEO of C2N Diagnostics, said in a press release.

“This is really an important advance,” said Howard Fillit, MD, founding executive director and chief science officer of the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation (ADDF), which partially funded the development of the test, in a separate press release.

“You can now walk into your doctor’s office to get a blood test to help detect Alzheimer’s disease,” said Dr. Fillit. “This test answers a critical need for less costly and accessible diagnostic testing in memory and dementia care.”

A word of caution

However, Maria C. Carrillo, PhD, chief science officer, Alzheimer’s Association, highlighted the need for caution. The test is “very new,” experts have only “limited information” about it, and it is only available by prescription from a healthcare provider for patients with cognitive impairment, said Dr. Carrillo.

“The test is not [Food and Drug Administration] approved and it does not, on its own, diagnose Alzheimer’s disease,” added Dr. Carrillo. “Without FDA review, healthcare providers lack the agency’s guidance for how to use it when making decisions about a person’s health or treatment.”

Dr. Carrillo also noted that the test has only been studied in a limited number of individuals and that few data are available regarding underrepresented populations.

“As a result, it is not clear how accurate or generalizable the results are for all individuals and populations,” she noted.

Another factor to consider, said Dr. Carrillo, is that the test is not covered by insurance, including Medicare and Medicaid.

How it works

The test (PrecivityAD) is for use in patients with cognitive impairment. It requires a very small blood sample – as little as a teaspoon – from the patient’s forearm. The physician sends the sample to C2N Diagnostic’s specialized laboratory, where it is analyzed using mass spectrometry to measure concentrations of amyloid beta 42 and 40 and to detect the presence of apolipoprotein E isoforms.

The lab report, which is sent to the patient’s physician, details biomarker levels and provides an overall combined score, known as the Amyloid Probability Score, to assess the likelihood of low, intermediate, or high levels of amyloid plaque in the brain.

The company reports that, on the basis of data from 686 patients older than 60 years who had subjective cognitive impairment or dementia, the test correctly identified brain amyloid plaque status, as determined by quantitative amyloid positron-emission tomography (PET) scans, in 86% of the patients. In the analysis, the area under the curve for the receiver operating characteristic was 0.88.

The company notes that the test, the results of which require interpretation by a health care provider, is an important new tool to aid physicians in the evaluation process.

The new blood test is currently available in 45 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.

C2N Diagnostics is moving ahead with development of a brain health panel to detect multiple blood-based markers for Alzheimer’s disease to aid in disease staging, treatment monitoring, and differential diagnosis.

The ADDF believes the path to approval of treatments of Alzheimer’s disease starts with a better diagnosis, Dr. Fillit said in his organization’s press release.

“Investing in biomarker research has been a core goal for the ADDF because reliable, accessible, and affordable biomarkers for Alzheimer’s diagnosis are critical to our ability to find drugs to prevent, slow, and even cure the disease. Our funding helped bring the first PET scan to market and now has helped bring the first blood test to market,” he said.

In addition to the ADDF, the National Institutes of Health, the GHR Foundation, and the BrightFocus Foundation contributed funding for the development of the amyloid blood test.

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

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