| Literature DB >> 29036825 |
Abstract
The New Criteria for the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD), published by a group of experts in 2007, have resulted in a revolution in the comprehension of the disease. Before 2007, the diagnosis of AD dementia was done through a process of exclusion: it was considered in the case of patients with a dementia syndrome without identified etiologies. This traditional algorithm had three major limitations that penalize the disease: 1) a low accuracy of the performance which may share responsibility for negative results in clinical trials; 2) a late identification of the patients only when they reach the threshold of dementia which may delay the activation of optimal care; and last but not least, 3) an absence of clear recognition of AD as a disease because of the lack of specific arguments for its identification. Since 2007, the disease has gained a clear definition based on positive evidence: a specific clinical phenotype (the amnestic syndrome of the hippocampal type) and the presence of biomarkers, considered as a biological signature of the disease. Thanks to these positive arguments, AD is a clinically and biologically well-delineated disease, no longer defined as "probable". It is now possible to certify that a given patient has or does not have the disease. Like diabetes, cancer, hyperthyroidism or any other disorder, AD has now a clear definition with well-defined borders. The disease has entered the world of medicine with identified diseases with a biological fingerprint. This is the story of this adventure that we will present now.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; biomarkers; criteria; diagnosis; preclinical stage; prodromal stage
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29036825 PMCID: PMC5870001 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-170536
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472
The new diagnostic approach
| Before 2007: Diagnosis based on an exclusionary process |
| •dementia: loss of autonomy |
| •elimination of other causes of dementia: |
| ∘ blood exams: endocrinopathies, infectious or inflammatory |
| disorders |
| ∘ CT-Scan/MRI: vascular lesions, tumor, hydrocephalus |
| Since 2007: Diagnosis based on positive arguments |
| •an amnestic syndrome of the hippocampal type |
| •integration of biomarkers in the diagnostic process: |
| ∘ a biological signature on CSF |
| ∘ the visualization of brain lesions with PET amyloid tracer |
Definition of AD biomarkers
| Diagnostic marker |
| •Pathophysiological marker |
| •Reflects |
| •Is present at all stages of the disease |
| •Observable even in the asymptomatic state |
| •Might not be correlated with clinical severity |
| •Indicated for inclusion in protocols of clinical trials |
| Progression marker |
| •Topographical or downstream marker |
| •Poor disease specificity |
| •Indicates clinical severity (staging marker) |
| •Might not be present in early stages |
| •Quantifies time to disease milestones |
| •Indicated for disease progression |
Added-value of the IWG-2 criteria
| •Focus on the |
| •Utilize a single diagnostic framework for the entire range of clinical severity |
| •Integrate |
| •AD diagnosis based |
| •Integrate causative |
| • |
| •Can be used for inclusion of patients with “ |
Consensus on two different states
| Alzheimer’s disease |
| •Defined by both amyloidopathy and tauopathy (A+ and T+) |
| •Encompasses different stages in continuum |
| ∘ Preclinical AD |
| ∘ Clinical AD (prodromal; mild to severe dementia) |
| Asymptomatic at Risk for AD |
| •Cognitively normal individuals |
| •Biomarker pattern insufficient to reach above definition |
| of AD |
| •Characterized as: |
| ∘ Asymptomatic Amyloid + |
| ∘ Asymptomatic Tau + |
Fig.1Definition of AD and of asymptomatic at risk. A consensus on the definition of AD based on specific biomarkers was reached (Dubois et al. [34]), which works for any stage of the disease, even for the preclinical stage of the disease. Asymptomatic at risk for AD are identified when the biomarker pattern is insufficient to reach the above definition of AD.