Frontiers in Neurology (Mar 2024)

Clinical utility of plasma Aβ42/40 ratio by LC-MS/MS in Alzheimer’s disease assessment

  • Darren M. Weber,
  • Steven W. Taylor,
  • Robert J. Lagier,
  • Jueun C. Kim,
  • Scott M. Goldman,
  • Nigel J. Clarke,
  • David E. Vaillancourt,
  • Ranjan Duara,
  • Ranjan Duara,
  • Karen N. McFarland,
  • Wei-en Wang,
  • Todd E. Golde,
  • Todd E. Golde,
  • Michael K. Racke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2024.1364658
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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IntroductionPlasma Aβ42/40 ratio can help predict amyloid PET status, but its clinical utility in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) assessment is unclear.MethodsAβ42/40 ratio was measured by LC-MS/MS for 250 specimens with associated amyloid PET imaging, diagnosis, and demographic data, and for 6,192 consecutive clinical specimens submitted for Aβ42/40 testing.ResultsHigh diagnostic sensitivity and negative predictive value (NPV) for Aβ-PET positivity were observed, consistent with the clinical performance of other plasma LC-MS/MS assays, but with greater separation between Aβ42/40 values for individuals with positive vs. negative Aβ-PET results. Assuming a moderate prevalence of Aβ-PET positivity, a cutpoint was identified with 99% NPV, which could help predict that AD is likely not the cause of patients’ cognitive impairment and help reduce PET evaluation by about 40%.ConclusionHigh-throughput plasma Aβ42/40 LC-MS/MS assays can help identify patients with low likelihood of AD pathology, which can reduce PET evaluations, allowing for cost savings.

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