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Alzheimer's diagnostic guidelines updated
for first time in decades…NIH-supported
revision also proposes staging of disease,
potential use of biomarkers
April 27, 2011--For the first time in 27 years,
clinical diagnostic criteria for Alzheimer's
disease dementia have been revised, and
research guidelines for earlier stages of
the disease have been characterized to
reflect a deeper understanding of the
disorder.
The National Institute on Aging/Alzheimer's
Association Diagnostic Guidelines for
Alzheimer's Disease outline some new
approaches for clinicians and provides
scientists with more advanced guidelines for
moving forward with research on diagnosis
and treatments.
They mark a major change in how experts think
about and study Alzheimer's disease.
Development of the new guidelines was led by
the National Institutes of Health and the
Alzheimer's Association.
The original criteria were the first to address
the disease and described only later stages,
when symptoms of dementia are already
evident. The updated guidelines announced
today cover the full spectrum of the disease
as it gradually changes over many years.
They describe the earliest preclinical stages
of the disease, mild cognitive impairment,
and dementia due to Alzheimer's pathology.
Importantly, the guidelines now address the use
of imaging and biomarkers in blood and
spinal fluid that may help determine whether
changes in the brain and those in body
fluids are due to Alzheimer's disease.
Biomarkers are increasingly employed in the
research setting to detect onset of the
disease and to track progression, but cannot
yet be used routinely in clinical diagnosis
without further testing and validation.
"Alzheimer's research has greatly evolved over
the past quarter of a century. Bringing the
diagnostic guidelines up to speed with those
advances is both a necessary and rewarding
effort that will benefit patients and
accelerate the pace of research," said
National Institute on Aging Director Richard
J. Hodes, M.D.
"We believe that the publication of these
articles is a major milestone for the
field," said William Thies, Ph.D., chief
medical and scientific officer at the
Alzheimer's Association.
"Our vision is that this process will result in
improved diagnosis and treatment of
Alzheimer's, and will drive research that
ultimately will enable us to detect and
treat the disease earlier and more
effectively. This would allow more people to
live full, rich lives without—or with a
minimum of—Alzheimer's symptoms."
The new guidelines appear online April 19, 2011
in Alzheimer's
& Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's
Association. They were developed by
expert panels convened last year by the
National Institute on Aging (NIA), part of
the NIH, and the Alzheimer's Association.
Preliminary recommendations were announced
at the Association's International
Conference on Alzheimer's Disease in July
2010, followed by a comment period.
Guy M. McKhann, M.D., Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine, Baltimore, and David S.
Knopman, M.D., Mayo Clinic, Rochester,
Minn., co-chaired the panel that revised the
1984 clinical Alzheimer's dementia criteria.
Marilyn Albert, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, headed the
panel refining the MCI criteria. Reisa A.
Sperling, M.D, Brigham and Women's Hospital,
Harvard Medical School, Boston, led the
panel tasked with defining the preclinical
stage. The journal also includes a paper by
Clifford Jack, M.D., Mayo Clinic, Rochester,
Minn., as senior author, on the need for and
concept behind the new guidelines.
The original 1984 clinical criteria for
Alzheimer's disease, reflecting the limited
knowledge of the day, defined Alzheimer's as
having a single stage, dementia, and based
diagnosis solely on clinical symptoms.
It assumed that people free of dementia
symptoms were disease-free. Diagnosis was
confirmed only at autopsy, when the
hallmarks of the disease, abnormal amounts
of amyloid proteins forming plaques and tau
proteins forming tangles, were found in the
brain.
Since then, research has determined that
Alzheimer's may cause changes in the brain a
decade or more before symptoms appear and
that symptoms do not always directly relate
to abnormal changes in the brain caused by
Alzheimer's.
For example, some older people are found to
have abnormal levels of amyloid plaques in
the brain at autopsy yet never showed signs
of dementia during life. It also appears
that amyloid deposits begin early in the
disease process but that tangle formation
and loss of neurons occur later and may
accelerate just before clinical symptoms
appear.
To reflect what has been learned, the National
Institute on Aging/Alzheimer's Association
Diagnostic Guidelines for Alzheimer's
Disease cover three distinct stages of
Alzheimer's disease:
-
Preclinical – The preclinical stage, for
which the guidelines only apply in a
research setting, describes a phase in
which brain changes, including amyloid
buildup and other early nerve cell
changes, may already be in process. At
this point, significant clinical
symptoms are not yet evident. In some
people, amyloid buildup can be detected
with positron emission tomography (PET)
scans and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
analysis, but it is unknown what the
risk for progression to Alzheimer's
dementia is for these individuals.
However, use of these imaging and
biomarker tests at this stage are
recommended only for research. These
biomarkers are still being developed and
standardized and are not ready for use
by clinicians in general practice.
-
Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) – The
guidelines for the MCI stage are also
largely for research, although they
clarify existing guidelines for MCI for
use in a clinical setting. The MCI stage
is marked by symptoms of memory
problems, enough to be noticed and
measured, but not compromising a
person's independence. People with MCI
may or may not progress to Alzheimer's
dementia. Researchers will particularly
focus on standardizing biomarkers for
amyloid and for other possible signs of
injury to the brain. Currently,
biomarkers include elevated levels of
tau or decreased levels of beta-amyloid
in the CSF, reduced glucose uptake in
the brain as determined by PET, and
atrophy of certain areas of the brain as
seen with structural magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI). These tests will be used
primarily by researchers, but may be
applied in specialized clinical settings
to supplement standard clinical tests to
help determine possible causes of MCI
symptoms.
-
Alzheimer's Dementia – These criteria
apply to the final stage of the disease,
and are most relevant for doctors and
patients. They outline ways clinicians
should approach evaluating causes and
progression of cognitive decline. The
guidelines also expand the concept of
Alzheimer's dementia beyond memory loss
as its most central characteristic. A
decline in other aspects of cognition,
such as word-finding, vision/spatial
issues, and impaired reasoning or
judgment may be the first symptom to be
noticed. At this stage, biomarker test
results may be used in some cases to
increase or decrease the level of
certainty about a diagnosis of
Alzheimer's dementia and to distinguish
Alzheimer's dementia from other
dementias, even as the validity of such
tests is still under study for
application and value in everyday
clinical practice.
The panels purposefully left the guidelines
flexible to allow for changes that could
come from emerging technologies and advances
in understanding of biomarkers and the
disease process itself.
"The guidelines discuss biomarkers currently
known, and mention others that may have
future applications," said Creighton H.
Phelps, Ph.D., of the NIA Alzheimer's
Disease Centers Program. "With researchers
worldwide striving to develop, validate and
standardize the application of biomarkers at
every stage of Alzheimer's disease, we
devised a framework flexible enough to
incorporate new findings."
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