Genetic risk scores enhance the diagnostic value of plasma biomarkers of brain amyloidosis

Author:

Ramanan Vijay K1ORCID,Gebre Robel K2,Graff-Radford Jonathan1ORCID,Hofrenning Ekaterina3,Algeciras-Schimnich Alicia4,Figdore Daniel J4,Lowe Val J2,Mielke Michelle M5,Knopman David S1ORCID,Ross Owen A67,Jack Clifford R2ORCID,Petersen Ronald C13,Vemuri Prashanthi2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic , Rochester, MN 55905 , USA

2. Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic , Rochester, MN 55905 , USA

3. Department of Quantitative Health Sciences, Mayo Clinic , Rochester, MN 55905 , USA

4. Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo Clinic , Rochester, MN 55905 , USA

5. Department of Epidemiology and Prevention, Wake Forest University School of Medicine , Winston-Salem, NC 27101 , USA

6. Department of Neuroscience, Mayo Clinic , Jacksonville, FL 32224 , USA

7. Department of Clinical Genomics, Mayo Clinic , Jacksonville, FL 32224 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Blood-based biomarkers offer strong potential to revolutionize diagnosis, trial enrolment and treatment monitoring in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). However, further advances are needed before these biomarkers can achieve wider deployment beyond selective research studies and specialty memory clinics, including the development of frameworks for optimal interpretation of biomarker profiles. We hypothesized that integrating Alzheimer’s disease genetic risk score (AD-GRS) data would enhance the diagnostic value of plasma AD biomarkers by better capturing extant disease heterogeneity. Analysing 962 individuals from a population-based sample, we observed that an AD-GRS was independently associated with amyloid PET levels (an early marker of AD pathophysiology) over and above APOE ε4 or plasma p-tau181, amyloid-β42/40, glial fibrillary acidic protein or neurofilament light chain. Among individuals with a high or moderately high plasma p-tau181, integrating AD-GRS data significantly improved classification accuracy of amyloid PET positivity, including the finding that the combination of a high AD-GRS and high plasma p-tau181 outperformed p-tau181 alone in classifying amyloid PET positivity (88% versus 68%; P = 0.001). A machine learning approach incorporating plasma biomarkers, demographics and the AD-GRS was highly accurate in predicting amyloid PET levels (90% training set; 89% test set) and Shapley value analyses (an explainer method based in cooperative game theory) indicated that the AD-GRS and plasma biomarkers had differential importance in explaining amyloid deposition across individuals. Polygenic risk for AD dementia appears to account for a unique portion of disease heterogeneity, which could non-invasively enhance the interpretation of blood-based AD biomarker profiles in the population.

Funder

NIH

GHR Foundation

Mayo Clinic

Alzheimer’s Association

Mayo Foundation

Liston Award

Elsie and Marvin Dekelboum Family Foundation

Schuler Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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