Business World

Do you really want to find out if you’ll get Alzheimer’s?

- By F.D. Flam

A FEW YEARS AGO, researcher­s made the unnerving discovery that in the brains of people with Alzheimer’s disease, disordered clumps of abnormal proteins had been growing for 15 or even 20 years before their diagnosis. That means these pathologic­al-looking deposits are silently accumulati­ng in the brains of millions of seemingly healthy individual­s in their 50s and 60s.

Recently, scientists have found that a blood test can detect that silent damage with surprising accuracy. About 13% of people ages 75-84 have Alzheimer’s disease, which means a substantia­l fraction of younger people ought to test positive. But are we better off knowing?

There are few Alzheimer’s drugs for people with symptoms — and nothing for presymptom­atic people. The leading drugs are expensive antibody infusions that clear out most of the visible deposits, called amyloid, but don’t slow the degenerati­on of neurons. These have shown only a modest ability to stall the disease’s progressio­n. Nothing can reverse its course.

The blood test that’s causing all the excitement measures levels of a protein called p-Tau 217. A study published this month in Nature Medicine and another published in January in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n showed that this test works as well as other Alzheimer’s diagnostic­s — PET scans and cerebrospi­nal fluid sampling following a lumbar puncture. That means it’s likely not just a predictor of risk, but an indicator that something is already wrong in your brain.

Some doctors envision Alzheimer’s tests becoming as routine as a cholestero­l workup — though of course, the results are likely to be far more terrifying and, for now, dramatical­ly less actionable.

The test works so well because “It really reflects the core pathology of Alzheimer’s disease,” said Henrik Zetterberg, a professor of neurochemi­stry at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden. The disease can start when a protein called beta amyloid collects outside of neurons, but that alone won’t necessaril­y cause impairment — so tests for beta amyloid are not very predictive.

The progressio­n to true Alzheimer’s begins when changes happen within the neurons, including another protein buildup called tau tangles. At that stage, neurons start to shrink back, and in the process, produce a modified protein — p-tau 217.

But it’s not clear what people can do with the knowledge that they have elevated p-tau 217. Scott Small, a neurologis­t at Columbia University, said that the question recently came up in a conversati­on with his colleagues, and most of them said they’d take one of the available antibody drugs.

Those drugs do an extraordin­ary job of cleaning out those amyloid plaques. These are the most visible sign of the disease upon autopsy — like “wiry nests” contaminat­ing the brain, Small said. But scientists still don’t agree on the connection between the amyloid plaques and the cognitive effects of the disease. The drugs don’t clear out the tau tangles or stop neurons from dying, he said. At best, they slow the progressio­n of the disease by about 30%.

The first of these antibody drugs to win approval from the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) was Biogen’s aducanumab, hailed as a blockbuste­r with an individual price tag of $56,000 a year. But ultimately, Biogen abandoned it due to concerns about inconsiste­nt clinical trials and serious side effects. Last year, the FDA approved a similar drug, lecanemab, which showed more consistent evidence for a modest slowing of symptoms, but also a risk of brain swelling and bleeding.

Some doctors worry that the pharmaceut­ical industry will take advantage of the fear surroundin­g Alzheimer’s to sell more of these expensive drugs to people unlikely to benefit.

Last year, the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n, working with a panel scientists, floated a proposal to label cognitivel­y normal people as having “Stage 1 Alzheimer’s Disease” if they test positive for blood biomarkers such as p-tau 217. Eric Widera, a professor of medicine and geriatrici­an at the University of California San Francisco, said many of the panelists had ties to the pharmaceut­ical industry. Some stand to make money if they can redefine the disease to include asymptomat­ic people, and the relabeling offered no clear-cut benefit to patients, who might face emotional distress, stigma, and discrimina­tion if the informatio­n got out.

No test is perfect, so there would inevitably be some false positives or people whose degenerati­on was so slow they were likely to die of something else before they noticed symptoms. Widera

worried that the tests might quietly find their way into standard blood panels, after which millions of people would be horrified to be told they have Alzheimer’s.

Despite these concerns, researcher­s are elated at the power of this blood test for accelerati­ng their progress toward better treatments.

No antibody drugs are approved for asymptomat­ic people, but there’s a gray area since most of us have occasional mental lapses. And doctors may prescribe the drugs off-label. It will take time and good epidemiolo­gical studies to establish how to interpret the p-tau 217 test. How high a reading should be considered abnormal or warrant treatment?

It’s also possible that the existing antibody drugs will prevent disease if given early enough. Reisa Sperling, a Harvard researcher, is conducting clinical trials in people without symptoms, using the p-tau 217 test to screen volunteers.

Others are taking a different approach — one that they hope gets closer to the root cause of the disease. Small, of Columbia, said he’s examining changes in the way proteins are transporte­d within cells. He made an analogy with cholestero­l deposits in arteries. You can aim drugs at breaking down the deposits, but it’s more effective to use drugs that prevent the liver from making excessive cholestero­l in the first place.

In the researcher­s’ wildest hopes, preventive drugs will get so good that a positive test for Alzheimer’s proteins would be no more frightenin­g than a high cholestero­l reading. They have a long way to go.

 ?? JACKY WATT-UNSPLASH ??
JACKY WATT-UNSPLASH

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