Abstract
The pathology of sporadic Alzheimer’s disease (AD) may be present at mid-life and precede the prodromal and clinical dementia syndromes associated with the disorder by decades. Few successful therapeutic treatments exist and, as a result, attention is turning to the preclinical stages of the disease for the development of future intervention strategies. The success of such strategies will rely on well-defined biomarkers of preclinical disease to identify and monitor changes earlier in the disease course. Here, we consider whether immune function changes are potentially useful markers of preclinical disease. We have selected studies spanning epidemiological, animal, clinical and imaging research pertaining to the earliest stages of AD pathogenesis, as well as studies of non-demented adults at high AD risk. We examine changes in inflammatory markers, alongside changes in established biomarkers, to highlight their suitability as disease indicators across preclinical and prodromal stages. We conclude that further work surrounding this topic is required, calling for larger prospective epidemiological studies of preclinical disease that incorporate serial assessment designs with a wider range of inflammatory mediators. We anticipate that future benefits of work in this area include improved disease detection and modification, as well as diagnostic accuracy of trial participants, leading to more cost-effective observation and intervention studies.
Highlights
Increasing evidence suggests sporadic Alzheimer’s disease to be a clinically silent disease of mid-life, which remains undetected for decades until its terminal stage, characterized by dementia [1,2,3,4]
Additional support comes from associations of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) dementia with genes implicated in immune responses, such as TREM2, CR1 and CD33 and chronic psychological stress [13,14,15]
Levels are higher in preclinical stages 2-3 and suspected non-Alzheimer’s pathophysiology (SNAP) stage compared to Stage 0, 1 [60]
Summary
Increasing evidence suggests sporadic Alzheimer’s disease to be a clinically silent disease of mid-life, which remains undetected for decades until its terminal stage, characterized by dementia [1,2,3,4]. Possible that such persons are manifesting pre-clinical AD, a proposition supported by studies of midlife and older normal adults showing elevated levels of inflammatory markers in association with cognitive deficits and brain changes (Table 1).
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