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Blood test could diagnose Alzheimer’s years before symptoms appear

The results offer hope of medications or lifestyle changes for people at risk or battling the disease.

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By Mark Waghorn via SWNS

A blood test that has been developed could diagnose Alzheimer's years before symptoms develop.

It detects a rogue brain protein called amyloid beta that clumps together - killing neurons.

The toxic bundles, or "oligomers" form over decades - opening a "golden window" of therapeutic opportunity.

Currently, the disease is diagnosed once devastating memory loss and confusion have already taken hold. By that point, it's too late for drugs that target the cause.

Senior author Professor Valerie Daggett of Washington University in Seattle, Wa. said: "What clinicians and researchers have wanted is a reliable diagnostic test for Alzheimer's disease.

"One that confirms a diagnosis and can also detect signs of the disease before cognitive impairment happens.

"That's important for individuals' health and for all the research into how toxic oligomers of amyloid beta go on and cause the damage that they do.

"What we show here is SOBA may be the basis of such a test."

In a trial of more than 300 people, SOBA (soluble oligomer binding assay) detected amyloid beta clumps in the blood of ten who showed no signs of cognitive impairment when it was collected.

All were diagnosed years later with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) - memory problems that can lead to full-blown Alzheimer's.

male doctor in a white coat and tie stands and holds a purple silk ribbon in the form of a loop, wearing blue sterile medical gloves. Symbol of early research and disease control, Alzheimer's disease
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The results offer hope of medications or lifestyle changes being prescribed when they are most likely to be effective.

They could also offer hope of national screening programs - with older people being checked during routine visits to the GP.

SOBA exploits a unique property of the misfolded amyloid beta proteins which turn into unusual structures known as alpha sheets.

Daggett and her colleagues designed a synthetic version that binds to them in either cerebrospinal fluid or blood.

Their technique then uses standard methods to confirm the clumps attached to the test surface are made up of amyloid beta.

The U.S. team tested SOBA on 310 subjects whose medical records had been made available for Alzheimer's research.

It detected oligomers in those who died with mild cognitive impairment and moderate to severe Alzheimer's.

In 53 cases, the participant's diagnosis of Alzheimer's was verified after death by autopsy.

The blood samples of 52 of them, which had been taken years before their deaths, contained toxic oligomers.

Those from other individuals who remained unimpaired lacked toxic oligomers.

At the time their blood samples had been taken, all participants were recorded as having no signs of cognitive impairment.

The researchers are working with colleagues at AltPep, the university's spinout company, to develop SOBA into a diagnostic Alzheimer's test for oligomers.

They also showed it could easily be modified to detect toxic oligomers of another type of protein associated with Parkinson’s disease and Lewy body dementia.

Young pretty nurse and older woman in garden
(Ground Picture via Shutterstock)

Daggett said: "We are finding many human diseases are associated with the accumulation of toxic oligomers that form these alpha sheet structures.

"Not just Alzheimer’s, but also Parkinson’s, type 2 diabetes and more. SOBA is picking up unique alpha sheet structures.

"So we hope this method can help in diagnosing and studying many other 'protein misfolding' diseases."

SOBA, described in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, has further potential.

Daggett said: "We believe SOBA could aid in identifying individuals at risk or incubating the disease, as well as serve as a readout of therapeutic efficacy to aid in the development of early treatments for Alzheimer's disease."

The number of dementia cases worldwide will triple to more than 150 million by 2050 because of aging populations.

Effective therapies are essential to combat the growing care crisis and early diagnosis is key."

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