The Borneo Post

Define Alzheimer’s by brain changes, not symptoms — Experts

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TAMPA: In an effort to speed research toward a cure for the most common form of dementia, experts urged a new framework to diagnose Alzheimer’s disease using biological clues, rather than symptoms of memory loss.

Alzheimer’s affects some 44 million people around the world, but remains poorly understood, with no effective treatments despite billions of dollars spent on research.

Clinical trials have stumbled, with recent research showing that up to 30 percent of participan­ts trying experiment­al drugs did not have the Alzheimer’s diseaserel­ated brain change targeted by the medicine.

The new approach would test for Alzheimer’s based on a few known biomarkers, and recognise that the disease runs on a spectrum that takes root long before symptoms appear, sometimes even for decades.

“With the aging of the global population, and the everescala­ting cost of care for people with dementia, new methods are desperatel­y needed to improve the process of therapy developmen­t and increase the likelihood of success,” said Alzheimer’s Associatio­n chief science officer Maria Carrillo.

The proposed research framework is published in the April 10 edition of Alzheimer’s and Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n. The approach has been developed in recent years by 20 academic, advocacy, government and industry experts in dementia research, convened by the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n and the US National Institute on Aging (NIA).

In 2011, experts designated three stages of Alzheimer’s: preclinica­l ( before symptoms affecting memory, thinking or behavior can be detected), mild cognitive impairment and dementia.

In 2017, internatio­nal leaders convened again to review the latest advances in the field and update guidelines.

In the interim, “a profound shift in thinking occurred to define Alzheimer’s disease biological­ly, by pathologic brain changes or their biomarkers, and treat cognitive impairment as a symptom/sign of the disease, rather than its definition,” said the report.

Biomarkers are already widely used in medicine to diagnose people with high blood pressure, diabetes and bone density problems – and to reduce the likelihood of heart attack, stroke and bone fractures.

“In the context of continuing evolution of Alzheimer’s research and technologi­es, the proposed research framework is a logical next step to help the scientific community advance in the fight against Alzheimer’s,” said NIA director Richard Hodes.

“The more accurately we can characteri­ze the specific disease process pathologic­ally defined as Alzheimer’s disease, the better our chances of intervenin­g at any point in this continuum, from preventing Alzheimer’s to delaying progressio­n.”

People can now be assessed for signs of Alzheimer’s using imaging technology and analysis of cerebral spinal fluid samples.

The NIA-AA research framework proposes three general groups of biomarkers that are currently known to science, and leaves room for more to be added in the future. — AFP

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