Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3055849 Experimental Neurology 2010 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

We measured concentrations of Aβ peptides 1–42 and 1–40, and their ratio in plasma of patients carefully categorized clinically and neurochemically as having AD or other dementias with a newly commercially available multiplexing assay, characterized by reasonable laboratory performance (intra-assay imprecision in the range of 1.3–3.8% for Aβ1–42, and 1.8–4.1% for Aβ1–40, inter-assay imprecision for Aβ1–42, Aβ1–40, and Aβ1–42/Aβ1–40 concentration ratio in the range of 2.3–11.5%, 2.2–10.4% and 4.2–9.7%, respectively). Patients with AD or mild cognitive impairment of AD type (MCI-AD) whose clinical diagnosis was supported with CSF biomarkers (n = 193) had significantly lower Aβ1–42 plasma concentrations (p < 0.007), and Aβ1–42/1–40 ratios (p < 0.003) compared to patients with other dementias and MCI of other types (n = 64). No significant differences between persons with MCI of AD type and patients with early AD were observed, or between MCI of other types versus patients with early dementia of other types. Our findings reconfirm the hypothesis that alterations of biomarker concentrations occur early in a preclinical AD stage and that these alterations are also reflected in plasma.

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