4.5 Article

Blood-Based Biomarker Candidates of Cerebral Amyloid Using PiB PET in Non-Demented Elderly

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE
Volume 52, Issue 2, Pages 561-572

Publisher

IOS PRESS
DOI: 10.3233/JAD-151155

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; amyloid; biological markers; blood; plasma; preclinical; proteomics

Categories

Funding

  1. Alzheimer's Society
  2. Alzheimer's Research UK
  3. NIHR Biomedical Research Centre for Mental Health and Biomedical Research Unit for Dementia at the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and Kings College London
  4. Intramural Research Program of the NIH, National Institute on Aging
  5. GE Healthcare
  6. Janssen RD
  7. MRC [MR/L011859/1]
  8. Medical Research Council [MR/L011859/1, G0801464] Funding Source: researchfish
  9. MRC [G0801464] Funding Source: UKRI
  10. NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING [ZIAAG000434, ZIAAG000200] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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Increasingly, clinical trials for Alzheimer's disease (AD) are being conducted earlier in the disease phase and with biomarker confirmation using in vivo amyloid PET imaging or CSF tau and A beta measures to quantify pathology. However, making such a pre-clinical AD diagnosis is relatively costly and the screening failure rate is likely to be high. Having a blood-based marker that would reduce such costs and accelerate clinical trials through identifying potential participants with likely pre-clinical AD would be a substantial advance. In order to seek such a candidate biomarker, discovery phase proteomic analyses using 2DGE and gel-free LC-MS/MS for high and low molecular weight analytes were conducted on longitudinal plasma samples collected over a 12-year period from non-demented older individuals who exhibited a range of C-11-PiB PET measures of amyloid load. We then sought to extend our discovery findings by investigating whether our candidate biomarkers were also associated with brain amyloid burden in disease, in an independent cohort. Seven plasma proteins, including A2M, Apo-A1, and multiple complement proteins, were identified as pre-clinical biomarkers of amyloid burden and were consistent across three time points (p < 0.05). Five of these proteins also correlated with brain amyloid measures at different stages of the disease (q <0.1). Here we show that it is possible to detect a plasma based biomarker signature indicative of AD pathology at a stage long before the onset of clinical disease manifestation. As in previous studies, acute phase reactants and inflammatory markers dominate this signature.

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