| Literature DB >> 25261571 |
R M Ahmed1, R W Paterson2, J D Warren2, H Zetterberg3, J T O'Brien4, N C Fox2, G M Halliday1, J M Schott2.
Abstract
Imaging, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and blood-based biomarkers have the potential to improve the accuracy by which specific causes of dementia can be diagnosed in vivo, provide insights into the underlying pathophysiology, and may be used as inclusion criteria and outcome measures for clinical trials. While a number of imaging and CSF biomarkers are currently used for each of these purposes, this is an evolving field, with numerous potential biomarkers in varying stages of research and development. We review the currently available biomarkers for the three most common forms of neurodegenerative dementia, and give an overview of research techniques that may in due course make their way into the clinic. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.Entities:
Keywords: ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE; BRAIN MAPPING; COGNITION; DEMENTIA; FRONTAL LOBE
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25261571 PMCID: PMC4335455 DOI: 10.1136/jnnp-2014-307662
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry ISSN: 0022-3050 Impact factor: 10.154
Biomarkers currently used in diagnostic criteria
| Criteria | Comments |
|---|---|
| Biomarkers of amyloid pathology: Low CSF Aβ1-42 on CSF examination Positive amyloid PET scan | Either evidence of low CSF Aβ1-42 or positive amyloid PET scan required for diagnosis of amyloid brain deposition |
| Biomarkers of neuronal injury: Elevated CSF tau | Either elevated CSF tau, FDG-PET changes or structural MRI changes required for a diagnosis of neuronal injury |
| McKhann criteria | |
| bvFTD | |
| Frontal and/or anterior temporal lobe atrophy on MRI or CT | Either structural or PET imaging changes required for a diagnosis of probable bvFTD |
| Frontal and/or anterior temporal lobe hypoperfusion or hypometabolism on PET or SPECT | |
| Progressive non-fluent aphasia | |
| Predominant left posterior frontoinsular atrophy on MRI | Either structural or PET imaging changes required for an imaging supported diagnosis |
| Predominant left posterior frontoinsular hypoperfusion or hypometabolism on SPECT or PET | |
| Semantic dementia | |
| Predominant anterior temporal lobe atrophy | Either structural or PET imaging changes required for an imaging supported diagnosis |
| Predominant anterior temporal hypoperfusion or hypometabolism on SPECT or PET | |
| Relative preservation of medial temporal lobe structures on CT/MRI | Supportive feature (commonly present but not proven to have diagnostic specificity) |
| Generalised low uptake on SPECT/PET perfusion scan with reduced occipital activity | Supportive feature (commonly present but not proven to have diagnostic specificity) |
| Abnormal (low uptake) MIBG myocardial scintigraphy | Supportive feature (commonly present but not proven to have diagnostic specificity) |
| Abnormal uptake on PET/SPECT (eg, 123 I-FP CIT- DaTSCAN) | Supportive feature (used to differentiate DLB from AD and some forms of FTD) |
AD, Alzheimer's disease; APP, amyloid precursor protein; bvFDT, behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; FDG, 18-F-flourodeoxyglucose; MIBG, metaiodobenzylguanidine ; p-tau, tau phosphorylated at 181; PET, positron emission tomography; SPECT, single photon emission tomography; t-tau, total tau.
Optimal practice for CSF collection and processing
| Confounding variable | Ideal situation |
|---|---|
| Preanalytical factors | |
| Time of collection | 8:00–12 noon to avoid potential for diurnal variation in CSF biomarkers |
| LP needle | Needle gauge or design not known to influence measured biomarker concentration but gauge is related to risk of post-LP headache. Smallest size practical to use in diagnostic LP is 22G. Atraumatic needles are associated with reduced post-LP headache but increased failure rate |
| Use of lumbar catheters/manometers | Aβ1-42 may adhere—to be avoided, if possible |
| Collection vessel | Polypropylene tube recommended. Aβ1-42 and other proteins adhere to polystyrene and glass significantly reducing measured concentrations. Tube brand may also influence measured biomarker concentrations |
| Fasting | Not required |
| Blood contamination/blood–brain barrier dysfunction | Blood contamination of up to 5000 erythrocytes/µL cells does not alter measured biomarker concentration, but blood–brain barrier dysfunction equivalent to CSF/serum albumin ratio >11 results in reduced measured Aβ1-42 concentration and should be interpreted with care |
| Optimal volume | In addition to CSF collected for routine clinical examination (eg, cell count, oligoclonal bands, cytology, etc) 15 mL can safely be collected without increased risk of post LP headache |
| Centrifugation | Within 30 min of LP at 3000 rpm for 10 min to remove cells and other debris |
| Aliquot storage volume | Samples that are frozen prior to analysis should be stored in aliquots of a standardised volume which fits the tube size well. Specifically, one should strive for as high volume to surface ratio as possible (well-filled tubes). Volume to surface ratio and number of tube transfers influence measured Aβ1-42 concentration, probably due to protein adsorption |
| Freeze thawing | One or less freeze thaw cycles is recommended. Measured Aβ1-42 concentration drops by 20% after 3 freeze thaw cycles. Aβ1-42 and τ concentrations are stable at temperatures of −80°C |
| Choice of immunoassay/platform | Consistency required; variability in commercially available ELISA-based assays, calibration peptides and platforms mean interlaboratory and interassay consistency is poor |
CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; LB, lumbar puncture.
Figure 1Case showing clinical use of biomarkers. A 56 year old patient presented with a 5–10-year history of ‘scattiness’. Three years ago she developed difficulties reading an analogue clock, her spelling had declined and she had difficulty reading, losing her place from line to line. She received a clinical diagnosis of posterior cortical atrophy. Subsequently episodic memory became impaired. At the time of scanning, the Mini-Mental State Examination score was 19/30. A T1 volumetric MRI of the brain demonstrated a posterior pattern of cortical atrophy (A) with preserved hippocampal volumes compared with a healthy control patient (B); A 18F-florbetpair amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) scans shows widespread cortical amyloid deposition (C) compared with a healthy control (D) fludeoxyglucose (18F) PET scan demonstrates a posterior dominant pattern of hypometabolism (E) SUVR 1.0–1.4, compared with an age matched healthy control (F) SUVR 1.0–1.5. Cerebrospinal fluid examination demonstrated an elevated t-tau: 1080 pg/mL (NR 146–595); Aβ1–42 360 pg/mL ((NR 627–1322) giving a tau/Aβ1–42 ratio of 3. This case illustrates how different biomarkers can provide complementary information including regional neuronal loss, more widespread metabolic dysfunction, as well as confirming the underlying pathology—in this case, Alzheimer's disease. (NB for clinical purposes, 18F-florbetapir images should be interpreted on a grey rather than colour scale.)