Abstract

Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers are primarily evaluated through MRI, PET and CSF methods in order to diagnose and monitor disease. Recently, advances in the assessment of blood-based biomarkers have shown promise for simple, inexpensive, accessible and minimally invasive tools with diagnostic and prognostic value for Alzheimer’s disease. Most recently, plasma phosphorylated tau181 has shown excellent performance. The relationship between plasma phosphorylated tau181 and cerebral metabolic dysfunction assessed by [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose PET in Alzheimer’s disease is still unknown. This study was performed on 892 older individuals (297 cognitively unimpaired; 595 cognitively impaired) from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative cohort. Plasma phosphorylated tau181 was assessed using single molecular array technology and metabolic dysfunction was indexed by [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose PET. Cross-sectional associations between plasma and CSF phosphorylated tau181 and [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose were assessed using voxelwise linear regression models, with individuals stratified by diagnostic group and by β-amyloid status. Associations between baseline plasma phosphorylated tau181 and longitudinal (24 months) rate of brain metabolic decline were also assessed in 389 individuals with available data using correlations and voxelwise regression models. Plasma phosphorylated tau181 was elevated in β-amyloid positive and cognitively impaired individuals as well as in apolipoprotein E ε4 carriers and was significantly associated with age, worse cognitive performance and CSF phosphorylated tau181. Cross-sectional analyses showed strong associations between plasma phosphorylated tau181 and [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose PET in cognitively impaired and β-amyloid positive individuals. Voxelwise longitudinal analyses showed that baseline plasma phosphorylated tau181 concentrations were significantly associated with annual rates of metabolic decline in cognitively impaired individuals, bilaterally in the medial and lateral temporal lobes. The associations between plasma phosphorylated tau181 and reduced brain metabolism, primarily in cognitively impaired and in β-amyloid positive individuals, supports the use of plasma phosphorylated tau181 as a simple, low-cost, minimally invasive and accessible tool to both assess current and predict future metabolic dysfunction associated with Alzheimer’s disease, comparatively to PET, MRI and CSF methods.

Highlights

  • The pathognomonic signs of Alzheimer’s disease are the accumulation of b-amyloid (Ab) and the aggregation of hyperphosphorylated tau into intraneuronal tangles.[1]

  • The goal of the study is to examine (i) how the plasma biomarker compares to the CSF biomarker in terms of its association to [18F]FDG PET crosssectionally and (ii) how baseline levels of plasma p-tau[181] relate to longitudinal change in brain metabolic decline

  • Our study suggests that plasma p-tau[181] may provide a cost-effective and minimally invasive method to assess existing disease pathophysiology highly associated with metabolic dysfunction

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Summary

Introduction

The pathognomonic signs of Alzheimer’s disease are the accumulation of b-amyloid (Ab) and the aggregation of hyperphosphorylated tau into intraneuronal tangles.[1] Alzheimer’s disease is importantly characterized by brain glucose metabolism dysfunction and cerebral atrophy.[2] As these pathological changes precede the appearance of clinical symptoms by many years,[3] these pathologies may play an important role in both research and clinical trials for the screening, diagnosis and progression monitoring of Alzheimer’s disease.[4]. Given the need for more accessible Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers, blood-based biomarkers, such as measures of phosphorylated tau, Ab42/40 ratio and neurofilament light protein,[7] constitute a viable promise and warrant thorough investigation with regards to their specificity to Alzheimer’s disease.[8]

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