Scientists find new way to predict Alzheimer’s-related memory loss

Credit: Karolinska Institutet

In a new study, researchers have imaged tau protein in the brains of living patients with Alzheimer’s disease.

The amount and spread of tau proved a predictor of future memory loss.

They say brain imaging for measuring tau can be useful both for improving diagnosis and for developing more effective treatments.

The research was conducted by a team at Karolinska Institutet.

Alzheimer’s disease, which is the most common dementia disease, can be caused by accumulations of proteins in the brain that damage the neurons and cause memory loss.

However, the disease tends to take an individual course, which makes it hard to predict what symptoms a patient will develop.

For around 30% to 50% of patients, their condition can remain stable for many years, especially in the early stages of the disease; for others, deterioration is rapid.

The team says modern brain imaging techniques offer new possibilities for predicting how the disease will develop.

This is important both as an aid to diagnosis and a means of optimizing intervention for the individual patient and for the development of drugs.

The researchers have previously shown that PET (positron emission tomography) scans can be used to image the distribution of tau protein in the brains of living individuals. Accumulation of tau is linked to Alzheimer’s disease.

In the present study, 20 patients underwent a thorough examination using all existing markers for Alzheimer’s disease. They were also given a PET scan to image tau protein in their brains.

The researchers then monitored them for over four years so that their cognitive impairment could be assessed over time to find out if the amount of tau could predict the speed of deterioration.

They found that the patients who had low amounts of tau protein initially demonstrated stable function during follow-up, while patients with high amounts of tau protein showed a rapid deterioration in cognitive function.

The amount and distribution of tau protein in the brain could differentiate the patient groups with a precision of over 95%, while the precision of the existing clinical markers was at most 77%.

The exact amount of tau also tallied well with the exact degree of deterioration on the clinical scale that is routinely used at most clinics as a measure of the cognitive function of patients with memory loss.

These results suggest that tau protein has a major influence on cognition.

This means that drugs targeting accumulations of tau may have a better chance of changing the course of the disease than the treatments that have so far been tested and found wanting.

One author of the study is Konstantinos Chiotis, a doctor and researcher at the Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences, and Society, Karolinska Institutet.

The study is published in the journal Molecular Psychiatry.

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