| Literature DB >> 23093013 |
Martina Malnar1, Marko Kosicek, Raphael Bene, Iva Petek Tarnik, Sanda Pavelin, Ivana Babic, Bojana Brajenovic-Milic, Hrvoje Hecimovic, Marina Titlic, Zlatko Trkanjec, Ida Demarin, Silva Hecimovic.
Abstract
Low levels of amyloid-beta42 (Abeta42) and high total-tau (t-tau) or phosphorylated-tau (p181-tau) levels in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) were shown to be characteristic for Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients and for mildly cognitively impaired (MCI) or non-demented individuals who will progress to AD. The goal of this study was to evaluate the benefit of CSF biomarker testing in a setting with no specialized dementia centers, in order to improve the accuracy of AD diagnosis and to identify individuals with incipient AD. Using ELISA assay we analyzed CSF Abeta42, t-tau and p181-tau levels among clinically diagnosed non-demented individuals, AD patients and individuals with uncertain dementia (n=36). CSF cut-off values of low Abeta42 (less than or equal to 530 pg/mL) and high t-tau (less than or equal to 350 pg/mL) or p181-tau (less than or equal to 52 pg/mL) were used to identify individuals with AD/MCI-CSF profile, regardless of clinical diagnosis. APOE genotyping was performed using PCR-RFLP method. In accord with previous studies we detected significantly decreased levels of CSF Abeta42 and increased tau and p181-tau levels in clinically diagnosed AD group vs. non-demented controls. CSF profiling identified individuals with a typical AD/MCI-CSF pattern in clinically referred non-demented group (9 percent) and among patients with uncertain dementia (41.7 percent). APOE epsilon4-allele was associated with the CSF biomarker changes typical for AD. This study shows that in a non-specialized setting CSF biomarker testing may be used as a screening tool for improving the accuracy of AD diagnosis and for predicting individuals with incipient Alzheimer's disease who need to receive further clinical follow-up.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23093013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neurobiol Exp (Wars) ISSN: 0065-1400 Impact factor: 1.579