| Literature DB >> 33564663 |
Denis Horgan1, Flavio Nobili2,3, Charlotte Teunissen4, Timo Grimmer5, Dinko Mitrecic6, Laurence Ris7, Zvezdan Pirtosek8, Chiara Bernini1, Antonio Federico9, Daniel Blackburn10, Giancarlo Logroscino11, Nikos Scarmeas12.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) and related dementia is one of the growing threats to the sustainability of health and care systems in developed countries, and efforts to find therapies have had scant success. The main reasons for this are lack of efficient therapy, which is linked to too late discovery of the disease itself. With this in mind, biomarkers are recognised as an element which can bring a major contribution to research, helping elucidate the disease and the search for treatments. They are also playing an increasing role in early detection and timely diagnosis, which are considered the principal hopes of effective management in the absence of an effective drug. The current arsenal of biomarkers could already, if more widely deployed, provide an effective minimum service to patients and health systems. A concerted action by policy makers and stakeholders could drive progress in access to AD biomarker testing to provide an optimum service in the medium term. This paper discusses how to improve the use of and access to biomarker testing in the detection and diagnosis of AD and other diseases featuring dementia, and how EU healthcare systems could benefit. It outlines the challenges, lists the achievements to date, and highlights the actions needed to allow biomarker testing to deliver more fully on their potential in AD.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; Biomarkers; Diagnosis
Year: 2020 PMID: 33564663 PMCID: PMC7841748 DOI: 10.1159/000511233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Hub ISSN: 2296-6870