4.5 Article

Diagnostic Performance of Cerebrospinal Fluid Total Tau and Phosphorylated Tau in Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Results From the Swedish Mortality Registry

Journal

JAMA NEUROLOGY
Volume 71, Issue 4, Pages 476-483

Publisher

AMER MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2013.6455

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council
  2. Sahlgrenska University Hospital
  3. Sahlgrenska Academy
  4. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
  5. Axel Linders stiftelse
  6. Lundbeck Foundation
  7. Stiftelsen Psykiatriska Forskningsfonden
  8. Stiftelsen Gamla Tjanarinnor
  9. Uppsala Universitets Medicinska Fakultets stiftelse for psykiatrisk och neurologisk forskning
  10. Swedish Brain Fund
  11. Goteborgs Lakaresallskap
  12. Svenska Lakaresallskapet
  13. Thureus stiftelse
  14. Pfannenstills stiftelse
  15. Stiftelsen Carl-Bertil Laurells fond
  16. Klinisk biokemi i Norden
  17. Demensfonden, Sweden

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IMPORTANCE Identifying a clinical distinction between the invariably lethal prion disease Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) and nonprion rapidly progressive dementias is important and sometimes difficult; thus, reliable tools for diagnosis are in great demand. OBJECTIVE To test the diagnostic performance of dementia cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers total tau (T-tau), phosphorylated tau (P-tau), and the T-tau to P-tau ratio for CJD by analyzing the results from a large database of routine clinical samples in combination with diagnosis information from the Swedish Mortality Registry. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS This was a retrospective cohort study. We cross-referenced the Swedish Mortality Registry with a data set of CSF measurements of T-tau and P-tau performed in routine clinical testing at the Clinical Neurochemistry Laboratory of the Sahlgrenska University Hospital, which serves most of Sweden. The data set consisted of 9765 deceased individuals with CSF measures, including 93 with CJD, with 52 autopsy-verified samples (56%). MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES For each patient, T-tau and P-tau levels in CSF were measured and the T-tau to P-tau ratio was calculated. Biomarker levels (adjusted for age and sex) were analyzed in relation to the recorded cause of death and time of death. We specifically tested a previously defined CJD biomarker profile (T-tau >1400 ng/L and T-tau to P-tau-ratio >25). RESULTS Patients who died of CJD had elevated CSF T-tau levels and T-tau to P-tau ratio, but not elevated CSF P-tau levels, compared with patients who died of Alzheimer disease (AD) and other dementias. The previously defined biomarker profile had a specificity of 99.0%, a sensitivity of 78.5%, and a positive likelihood ratio of 79.9. When tested against common differential diagnoses, the sensitivity, specificity, and positive likelihood ratio of this profile was 78.5%, 99.6%, and 196.6, respectively, in relation to AD and 78.5%, 99.3%, and 109.3, respectively, in relation to other dementias. In CJD individuals (n = 30) with repeated measurements, but not in those with AD (n = 242) or other dementias (n = 258), T-tau levels and T-tau to P-tau ratios increased over time. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this routine clinical setting, the combination of increased T-tau levels and increased T-tau to P-tau ratios in CJD patients has a very high specificity against important differential diagnoses to CJD and may serve as a clinically useful diagnostic test.

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