| Literature DB >> 35888671 |
Jeffrey Cummings1, Jefferson Kinney1.
Abstract
Background andEntities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; amyloid; biomarkers; blood; magnetic resonance imaging; neurofilament light; phospho-tau; plasma; positron emission tomography
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35888671 PMCID: PMC9318582 DOI: 10.3390/medicina58070952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.948
FDA BEST classification of biomarkers use in drug development [5].
| Biomarker | Measurement |
|---|---|
| Risk/susceptibility | Indicates the potential for developing a disease or medical condition in an individual who does not currently have a clinically apparent disease or medical condition |
| Diagnosis | Detects or confirms the presence of a disease or condition or identifies an individual with a subtype of the disease |
| Monitoring | Measured serially to assess the status of a disease or medical condition for evidence of exposure to a medical product or environmental agent or to detect an effect of a medical product or biological agent |
| Pharmacodynamic/response | Changes in response to exposure to a medical product or an environmental agent |
| Predictive | The presence or change in the biomarker predicts an individual or group of individuals more likely to experience a favorable or unfavorable effect from the exposure to a medical product or environmental agent |
| Prognostic | Identifies the likelihood of a clinical event, disease recurrence, or disease progression in patients with a disease or medical condition |
| Safety | Measured before or after an exposure to a medical intervention or environmental agent to indicate the likelihood, presence, or extent of a toxicity as an adverse event |
Figure 1Landscape of fluid biomarkers for Alzheimer’s disease (© J Cummings; illustrator M de la Flor, PhD).
Target engagement biomarkers (CADRO—Common Alzheimer’s Disease Research Ontology); target engagement biomarkers are typically proximal in the cascade of events leading to cell death and dementia in AD. Biomarkers used to demonstrate disease modification using the amyloid, tau, neurodegeneration (A,T(N)) approach are listed in Table 3. Both well-established biomarkers and emerging, partially validated biomarkers are included in the table (the table is not an exhaustive list of all emerging biomarkers).
| CADRO Category | Fluid Biomarkers | Imaging, Digital, and |
|---|---|---|
| Amyloid beta | Inhibition of production of CSF Aβ by beta and gamma secretase inhibitors; increase in Aβ 1–15/16 by gamma secretase inhibitors | Amyloid PET |
| Tau | CSF and plasma p-tau 181, p-tau 217, and p-tau 231 | Tau PET |
| APOE, lipids, lipoprotein receptors | Lipid peroxidation, isoprostanes, and lipidomics | None identified |
| Neurotransmitter receptors | None identified | Nicotinic cholinergic receptor PET, muscarinic receptor PET, dopamine transporter SPECT and PET, acetylcholine (VCHAT) and serotonin vesicular transporter PET |
| Neurogenesis | None identified | MRI measures of hippocampus; fractional and quantitative anisotropy |
| Inflammation | CSF and plasma GFAP, CSF YKL40, sTREM2, and MCP-1 | TSPO PET and evolving ligands |
| Oxidative stress | Lipid peroxidation, isoprostanes, neuroprostanes, and u-P53 | None identified |
| Proteostasis/proteinopathies | CSF Aβ and proteomics | None identified |
| Metabolism and bioenergetics | Metabolomics | FDG PET |
| Vasculature | Plasma VCAM-1 and ICAM-1; CSF/plasma albumin ratio to assess blood–brain barrier | MRI |
| Growth factors and hormones | Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), HSD-1, and trial-specific hormones | MRI measures of hippocampal volume |
| Synaptic plasticity/neuroprotection | Neurogranin, synaptotagmin, and SNAP-25 | SV2A PET |
| Cell death | Total tau, neurofilament light, VILIP-1, and GAP-43 | Structural MRI (including hippocampal volume), FDG PET, and MR spectroscopy (NAA) |
| Gut-brain axis | Changes in blood amino acids and inflammatory cells | Changes in the microbe composition of the microbiome |
| Circadian rhythm | None identified | Polysomnography and actigraphy |
| Epigenetic regulators | MicroRNA | None identified |
Aβ—amyloid beta-protein; APOE—apolipoprotein E; CSF—cerebrospinal fluid; FDG—fluorodeoxyglucose; GAP-43—growth-associated protein 43; GFAP—glial fibrillary acidic protein; ICAM-1—intercellular adhesion molecule-1; MRI—magnetic resonance imaging; HSD-1—hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase—1; MCP1—monocyte chemotactic protein-1;NAA—N-acetylaspartic acid; PET—positron emission tomography; RNA—ribonucleic acid; SNAP25—synaptosomal-associated protein, 25 kDa; SPECT—single-photon emission computed tomography; sTRM2—soluble triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cell 2; SV2A—synaptic vesicle glycoprotein 2A; TSPO—translocator protein; p-tau—phosphorylated tau; VCAM-1—vascular cell adhesion molecule-1; VAChT—vesicular acetylcholine transporters; VILIP-1—visinin-like protein-1.
Amyloid, tau, neurodegeneration (AT(N)) biomarkers.
| Amyloid (A) | Tau (T) | Neurodegeneration (N) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Imaging | Amyloid PET | Tau PET | FDG PET; MRI; spectroscopy |
| CSF | Aβ 42/40 | p-tau (181, 217) | Total tau; NfL; VILIP-1 |
| Plasma | Aβ 42/40 | p-tau (181, 217) | Total tau; NfL |
Aβ—amyloid-beta protein; CSF—cerebrospinal fluid; FDG—fluorodeoxyglucose; MRI—magnetic resonance imaging; NfL—neurofilament light; PET—positron emission tomography; p-tau—phospho-tau.
Figure 2Context of use (COU) process required by the FDA for use of a biomarker as a drug development tool (DDT) in a clinical trial (© J Cummings; M de la Flor, PhD, illustrator).
Pathways of biomarkers to progress to clinical use.
| Pathway | Characteristic |
|---|---|
| Companion diagnostic | Required for appropriate use of a specific agent |
| In vitro diagnostic device (IVD) | Review by the FDA varies according to level of risk associated with the biomarker |
| 510(k) pathway | Shown to be substantially equivalent to an approved IVD with performance characteristics at least as good as the approved IVD |
| Laboratory Developed Test (LDT) | Performed in a single laboratory; relatively limited FDA review |
| Research Use Only (RUO) | Cannot be used in diagnosis; may be used to gather additional information on the biomarker |
Figure 3Five-phase process of biomarker development (© J Cummings, M de La Flor, PhD, Illustrator).