作者
Fernándo González‐Ortiz,Bjørn‐Eivind Kirsebom,José Luiz Contador,Jordan Tanley,Per Selnes,Berglind Gísladóttir,Lene Pålhaugen,Mathilde Suhr Hemminghyth,Jonas Jarholm,Ragnhild Skogseth,Geir Bråthen,Gøril Grøndtvedt,Atle Bjørnerud,Sandra Tecelão,Knut Waterloo,Dag Aarsland,Aida Fernández‐Lebrero,G. García-Escobar,Irene Navalpotro‐Gómez,Michael Turton,Agnes Hesthamar,Przemysław R. Kac,Johanna Nilsson,José A. Luchsinger,Kathleen M. Hayden,Peter Harrison,Albert Puig‐Pijoan,Henrik Zetterberg,Timothy M. Hughes,Marc Suárez‐Calvet,Thomas K. Karikari,Tormod Fladby,Kaj Blennow
摘要
Staging amyloid-beta (Aβ) pathophysiology according to the intensity of neurodegeneration could identify individuals at risk for cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease (AD). In blood, phosphorylated tau (p-tau) associates with Aβ pathophysiology but an AD-type neurodegeneration biomarker has been lacking. In this multicenter study (n = 1076), we show that brain-derived tau (BD-tau) in blood increases according to concomitant Aβ ("A") and neurodegeneration ("N") abnormalities (determined using cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers); We used blood-based A/N biomarkers to profile the participants in this study; individuals with blood-based p-tau+/BD-tau+ profiles had the fastest cognitive decline and atrophy rates, irrespective of the baseline cognitive status. Furthermore, BD-tau showed no or much weaker correlations with age, renal function, other comorbidities/risk factors and self-identified race/ethnicity, compared with other blood biomarkers. Here we show that blood-based BD-tau is a biomarker for identifying Aβ-positive individuals at risk of short-term cognitive decline and atrophy, with implications for clinical trials and implementation of anti-Aβ therapies.