New biomarker in the blood may help predict
Alzheimer's disease
July 24, 2012 – Higher levels of a certain
fat in the blood called ceramides may
increase a person's risk of developing
Alzheimer's disease, according to a study
published in the July 18, 2012, online issue
of Neurology®, the medical journal of the
American Academy of Neurology.
"Our study identifies this biomarker as a
potential new target for treating or
preventing Alzheimer's disease," said study
author Michelle M. Mielke, PhD, an
epidemiologist with the Mayo Clinic in
Rochester, Minn. Mielke was with Johns
Hopkins University at the time of the
research.
For the study, 99 women between the ages of
70 and 79 and free of dementia in the
Women's Health and Aging Study II had their
blood tested for levels of serum ceramides,
a fatty compound found throughout the body
that is associated with inflammation and
cell death. The participants were placed
into three groups: high, middle and low
levels of ceramides. They were then followed
for up to nine years. Of the 99
participants, 27 developed dementia and 18
of those were diagnosed with probable
Alzheimer's disease.
The study found that women who had the
highest levels of the biomarker were 10
times more likely to develop Alzheimer's
disease than women with the lowest levels.
Those with middle levels of the biomarker
were nearly eight times more likely to
develop the disease than those with the
lowest levels.
"These findings are important because
identifying an accurate biomarker for early
Alzheimer's that requires little cost and
inconvenience to a patient could help change
our focus from treating the disease to
preventing or delaying it," said Valory
Pavlik, PhD, with the Alzheimer's Disease
and Memory Disorders Center of Baylor
College of Medicine in Houston and a member
of the American Academy of Neurology, in an
accompanying editorial.
According to Pavlik, "While a larger, more
diverse study is needed to confirm these
findings, projections that the global
prevalence of Alzheimer's disease will
double every 20 years for the foreseeable
future have certainly increased the sense of
urgency among researchers and health care
agencies to identify more effective
screening, prevention and treatment
strategies."
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