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Total tau or total tau and phosphorylated-tau 181 and Alzheimer's disease

Authoring team

Three core CSF biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease have been developed, each correlating to one of the key characteristics of Alzheimer's disease pathology (1):

  • low levels of CSF amyloid-beta1-42 correlate with greater plaque load
  • high levels of total tau correlate with greater intensity of neuronal degeneration
  • high levels of phosphorylated tau correlate with neurofibrillary tangle pathology.

In the context of a clinical presentation consistent with Alzheimer's disease

  • presence of low levels of amyloid-beta1-42 in combination with high levels of total tau and phosphorylated tau provide support for the diagnosis with a sensitivity of 80-93% and specificity of 82-90% against cognitively normal controls (1)
    • other common dementia disorders can overlap with Alzheimer's disease both in terms of symptoms and CSF profile, and mixed pathologies are common.

A study by Skillback et al found (1):

  • frontotemporal dementia
    • highest cerebrospinal fluid levels of amyloid-beta1-42 and the lowest levels of total tau and phosphorylated tau
  • Alzheimer's disease
    • highest levels of total tau and phosphorylated tau and the lowest levels of amyloid-beta1-42 and amyloid-beta1-42:phosphorylated tau ratios were found
    • low amyloid-beta1-42, high total tau and high phosphorylated tau correlated with low Mini-Mental State Examination scores in Alzheimer's disease
  • in Parkinson's disease dementia and vascular dementia
    • low cerebrospinal fluid amyloid-beta1-42 was associated with low Mini-Mental State Examination score
  • cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers were strongly associated with specific clinical dementia diagnoses with Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal dementia showing the greatest difference in biomarker levels
  • cerebrospinal fluid amyloid-beta1-42, total tau, phosphorylated tau and the amyloid-beta1-42:phosphorylated tau ratio all correlated with poor cognitive performance in Alzheimer's disease, as did cerebrospinal fluid amyloid-beta1-42 in Parkinson's disease dementia and vascular dementia.

NICE states (2):

  • further tests for Alzheimer's disease
    • if the diagnosis is uncertain and Alzheimer's disease is suspected, consider either:
      • FDG-PET (fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography-CT), or perfusion SPECT (single-photon emission CT) if FDG-PET is unavailable or
      • examining cerebrospinal fluid for:
        • either total tau or total tau and phosphorylated-tau 181 AND
        • either amyloid beta 1-42 or amyloid beta 1-42 and amyloid beta 1-40.

Reference:


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