TY - JOUR
T1 - Alzheimer Disease
T2 - Scientific Breakthroughs and Translational Challenges
AU - Caselli, Richard J.
AU - Beach, Thomas G.
AU - Knopman, David S.
AU - Graff-Radford, Neill R.
N1 - Funding Information:
Potential Competing Interests: Dr Caselli is an investigator in clinical trials sponsored by Merck and Novartis and receives research support from the National Institute on Aging (grant nos. P30AG19610 and R01AG031581 ) and the Arizona Alzheimer's Consortium. Dr Beach is an investigator in clinical trials sponsored by Avid Radiopharmaceuticals and Navidea Biopharmaceuticals, has served as a consultant for Avid Radiopharmaceuticals and GE Healthcare; and receives or has received research support from the National Institutes of Health (grant nos. U24NS072026 , P30 AG19610 , R01 AG044372 , R21NS093222 , and R21AG044723 ), the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research, and the Arizona Alzheimer's Consortium. Dr Knopman serves on a Data Safety Monitoring Board for Lundbeck Pharmaceuticals and for the Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network; is an investigator in clinical trials sponsored by Biogen, TauRx Pharmaceuticals, Eli Lilly Pharmaceuticals, and the Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study; and receives research support from the National Institutes of Health (grant nos. P50 AG16574 , U01 AG06786 , and R01 AG41851 ). Dr Graff-Radford is an investigator in clinical trials sponsored by Biogen, Eli Lilly Pharmaceuticals, TauRx Pharmaceuticals, and Axovant and has served as a consultant for Cytox.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research
PY - 2017/6
Y1 - 2017/6
N2 - Alzheimer disease (AD) was originally conceived as a rare disease that caused presenile dementia but has come to be understood as the most prevalent cause of dementia at any age worldwide. It has an extended preclinical phase characterized by sequential changes in imaging and cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers with subtle memory decline beginning more than a decade before the emergence of symptomatic memory loss heralding the beginning of the mild cognitive impairment stage. The apolipoprotein E ε4 allele is a prevalent and potent risk factor for AD that has facilitated research into its preclinical phase. Cerebral Aβ levels build from preclinical through early dementia stages followed by hyperphosphorylated tau–related pathology, the latter driving cognitive deficits and dementia severity. Structural and molecular imaging can now recapitulate the neuropathology of AD antemortem. Autosomal dominant forms of early-onset familial AD gave rise to the amyloid hypothesis of AD, which, in turn, has led to therapeutic trials of immunotherapy designed to clear cerebral amyloid, but to date results have been disappointing. Genome-wide association studies have identified multiple additional risk factors, but to date none have yielded an effective alternate therapeutic target. Current and future trials aimed at presymptomatic individuals either harboring cerebral amyloid or at genetically high risk offer the hope that earlier intervention might yet succeed where trials in patients with established dementia have failed. A major looming challenge will be that of expensive, incompletely effective disease-modifying therapy: who and when to treat, and how to pay for it.
AB - Alzheimer disease (AD) was originally conceived as a rare disease that caused presenile dementia but has come to be understood as the most prevalent cause of dementia at any age worldwide. It has an extended preclinical phase characterized by sequential changes in imaging and cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers with subtle memory decline beginning more than a decade before the emergence of symptomatic memory loss heralding the beginning of the mild cognitive impairment stage. The apolipoprotein E ε4 allele is a prevalent and potent risk factor for AD that has facilitated research into its preclinical phase. Cerebral Aβ levels build from preclinical through early dementia stages followed by hyperphosphorylated tau–related pathology, the latter driving cognitive deficits and dementia severity. Structural and molecular imaging can now recapitulate the neuropathology of AD antemortem. Autosomal dominant forms of early-onset familial AD gave rise to the amyloid hypothesis of AD, which, in turn, has led to therapeutic trials of immunotherapy designed to clear cerebral amyloid, but to date results have been disappointing. Genome-wide association studies have identified multiple additional risk factors, but to date none have yielded an effective alternate therapeutic target. Current and future trials aimed at presymptomatic individuals either harboring cerebral amyloid or at genetically high risk offer the hope that earlier intervention might yet succeed where trials in patients with established dementia have failed. A major looming challenge will be that of expensive, incompletely effective disease-modifying therapy: who and when to treat, and how to pay for it.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.mayocp.2017.02.011
DO - 10.1016/j.mayocp.2017.02.011
M3 - Review article
C2 - 28578785
AN - SCOPUS:85026311794
SN - 0025-6196
VL - 92
SP - 978
EP - 994
JO - Mayo Clinic proceedings
JF - Mayo Clinic proceedings
IS - 6
ER -