Vancouver Sun

Finding a new way of defining Alzheimer’s

Researcher­s say biological signs might help diagnose disease sooner

- MARILYNN MARCHIONE

A number of scientists are proposing a new way to define Alzheimer’s disease — basing it on biological signs, such as brain changes, rather than memory loss and other symptoms of dementia that are used today.

The move is aimed at improving research, by using more objective criteria such as brain scans to pick patients for studies and enrol them sooner in the course of their illness, when treatments may have more chance to help.

But it’s too soon to use these scans and other tests in routine care, because they haven’t been validated for that yet, experts stress. For now, doctors will still rely on the tools they’ve long used to evaluate thinking skills to diagnose most cases.

Regardless of what tests are used to make the diagnosis, the new definition will have a startling effect: Many more people will be considered to have Alzheimer’s, because the biological signs can show up 15 to 20 years before symptoms do.

“The numbers will increase dramatical­ly,” said Dr. Clifford R. Jack Jr., a Mayo Clinic brain imaging specialist. “There are a lot more cognitivel­y normal people who have the pathology in the brain who will now be counted as having Alzheimer’s disease.”

He led a panel of experts, working with the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n and the National Institute on Aging, that updated guidelines on the disease, published earlier this week in Alzheimer’s & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n.

ABOUT ALZHEIMER’S

About 50 million people worldwide have dementia, and Alzheimer’s is the most common form. Under its current definition, Alzheimer’s disease is based on memory problems and other symptoms. (More than a half million Canadians currently have Alzheimer’s or another form of dementia, according to the Alzheimer Society of Canada.)

There is no cure — current medicines such as Aricept and Namenda just temporaril­y ease symptoms. Dozens of hoped-for treatments have failed, and doctors think one reason may be that the studies enrolled patients after too much brain damage had already occurred.

“By the time that you have the diagnosis of the disease, it’s very late,” said Dr. Eliezer Masliah, neuroscien­ce chief at the Institute on Aging. “What we’ve realized is that you have to go earlier and earlier and earlier,” just as doctors found with treating cancer, he said.

BETTER TESTS

Many other diseases, such as diabetes, already are defined by measuring a biomarker, an objective indicator such as blood sugar.

They measure certain forms of two proteins — amyloid and tau — that form plaques and tangles in the brain — and signs of nerve injury, degenerati­on and brain shrinkage. The guidelines spell out use of these biomarkers over a spectrum of mental decline, starting with early brain changes, through mild impairment and Alzheimer’s dementia.

WHATTODO?

Anyone with symptoms or family history of dementia, or even healthy people concerned about the risk can consider enrolling in one of the many studies underway.

“We need more people in this pre-symptomati­c stage” to see if treatments can help stave off decline, Masliah said.

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