Scientific Reports (Oct 2024)
Cognivue Clarity characterizes mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease in biomarker confirmed cohorts in the Bio-Hermes Study
Abstract
Abstract The Bio-Hermes Study was a cross-sectional observational study designed to develop a database of blood-based and digital biomarkers to improve detection of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI). We examined the ability of Cognivue Clarity to (a) detect MCI and AD in clinical diagnostics groups, (b) determine the presence of amyloid, and (c) distinguish between biomarker-confirmed groups. Bio-Hermes enrolled 887 participants who completed both Cognivue Clarity and amyloid PET scans (388 Cognitively Normal, 282 MCI, 217 Probable AD). Cognivue Clarity differentiated between Cognitively Normal, MCI, and probable AD in clinical cohorts, amyloid positive from amyloid negative individuals, and True Controls from MCI due to AD and AD in biomarker-confirmed cohorts (all p < 0.001) with large effect sizes. Cognivue Clarity correlated with amyloid PET and plasma amyloid and pTau (all p < 0.001). In biomarker confirmed groups, Cognivue Clarity had a positive likelihood ratio of 2.17, a negative likelihood ratio of 0.29, and a diagnostic odds ratio of 7.48. Cognivue Clarity detected cognitive impairment and differentiated between both clinically and biomarker defined MCI and AD groups. The use of Cognivue Clarity could assist with identification of MCI-AD or AD for inclusion into current treatment protocols or for enriching recruitment into clinical trials. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04733989).
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