A blood biomarker test for brain amyloid impacts the clinical evaluation of cognitive impairment

Author:

Monane Mark1ORCID,Johnson Kim G.2,Snider B. Joy3,Turner Raymond S.4,Drake Jonathan D.5,Maraganore Demetrius M.6,Bicksel James L.7,Jacobs Daniel H.8,Ortega Julia L.1,Henderson Joni1,Jiang Yan9,Huang Shuguang9,Coppinger Justine1,Fogelman Ilana1ORCID,West Tim1,Braunstein Joel B.1

Affiliation:

1. C2N Diagnostics, LLC St. Louis Missouri USA

2. Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences Duke University Durham North Carolina USA

3. Washington University School of Medicine St. Louis Missouri USA

4. Georgetown University School of Medicine Washington DC USA

5. Warren Alpert Medical School at Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA

6. Department of Neurology Tulane University School of Medicine New Orleans Louisiana USA

7. Capital Neurology Services McLean Virginia USA

8. Neurology Services of Orlando Orlando Florida USA

9. Stat4ward Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThe objective of this study was to examine clinicians' patient selection and result interpretation of a clinically validated mass spectrometry test measuring amyloid beta and ApoE blood biomarkers combined with patient age (PrecivityAD® blood test) in symptomatic patients evaluated for Alzheimer's disease (AD) or other causes of cognitive decline.MethodsThe Quality Improvement and Clinical Utility PrecivityAD Clinician Survey (QUIP I, ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05477056) was a prospective, single‐arm cohort study among 366 patients evaluated by neurologists and other cognitive specialists. Participants underwent blood biomarker testing and received an amyloid probability score (APS), indicating the likelihood of a positive result on an amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) scan. The primary study outcomes were appropriateness of patient selection as well as result interpretation associated with PrecivityAD blood testing.ResultsA 95% (347/366) concordance rate was noted between clinicians' patient selection and the test's intended use criteria. In the final analysis including these 347 patients (median age 75 years, 56% women), prespecified test result categories incorporated 133 (38%) low APS, 162 (47%) high APS, and 52 (15%) intermediate APS patients. Clinicians' pretest and posttest AD diagnosis probability changed from 58% to 23% in low APS patients and 71% to 89% in high APS patients (p < 0.0001). Anti‐AD drug therapy decreased by 46% in low APS patients (p < 0.0001) and increased by 57% in high APS patients (p < 0.0001).InterpretationThese findings demonstrate the clinical utility of the PrecivityAD blood test in clinical care and may have added relevance as new AD therapies are introduced.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),General Neuroscience

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