Scientists discover proteins that may predict dementia
Astudy of frozen blood samples has turned up a trove of proteins that may predict several forms of dementia more than 10 years before the disease is diagnosed, British and Chinese researchers say.
The study, published in the journal Nature Aging, is part of research of many teams to identify patients at risk for dementia using a simple blood test, an advance many scientists say will accelerate development of new treatments.
Brain scans can at present detect abnormal levels of the
Beta amyloid protein many years before Alzheimer’s dementia develops, but the tests are expensive and often not covered by insurance.
“Based on this study, it does seem likely that blood tests will be developed that can predict risk for developing dementia over the next 10 years, although individuals at higher risk often have difficulty knowing how to respond,” said Dr Suzanne Schindler, an Alzheimer’s researcher at Washington University in St Louis, who was not involved in the research.
Study author Jian-Feng Feng of Fudan University in Shanghai said such tests were critical in ageing populations such as
China’s. He is in talks on potential commercial development of a blood test based on their research.
In the study, researchers at the University of Warwick and Fudan University studied 52,645 blood samples from the UK’s Biobank research repository, collected from 2006 to 2010 from people then showing no signs of dementia.
Of these, 1,417 people eventually developed Alzheimer’s disease, vascular dementia or dementia from any cause. The researchers studied protein signatures common in these individuals and turned up 1,463 proteins associated with dementia and ranked these according to
how likely they were to predict dementia. They found that people whose blood carried higher levels of the proteins GFAP, NEFL, GDF15 and LTBP2 were consistently likelier to have developed Alzheimer’s disease, vascular dementia or dementia from any cause. People with elevated levels of GFAP were 2.32 times more likely to develop dementia, confirming findings of smaller studies that pointed to the contribution of this protein.
The authors said their research was not validated independently.
“This study did not include clinically available blood tests for Alzheimer disease, which [probably] would even better predict development of dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease,” they said.
Such tests are being used in identifying candidates for clinical trials testing treatments such as Eisai and Biogen’s Leqembi in patients with early stage or even presymptomatic disease,
The drug recently won regulatory approval in the US, Japan and China.
SIMPLE BLOOD TEST TO IDENTIFY PATIENTS AT RISK WILL SPEED UP DEVELOPMENT OF NEW TREATMENTS