Autor/es reacciones

Ivan Koychev

Clinical Associate Professor in Neuropsychiatry, Imperial College London

This is a well conducted study that adds to growing evidence that the blood biomarker p-tau217 is linked to future Alzheimer’s disease–related changes in the brain. However, the claim that a blood test could predict dementia 25 years before symptoms should be treated cautiously. The study shows that higher p-tau217 levels in older women were associated with a higher risk of developing mild cognitive impairment or dementia during up to 25 years of follow up, but this reflects the length of observation in the cohort rather than a test that can reliably predict the disorder decades in advance for an individual. It is also important to note that mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is not dementia, and many people with MCI do not go on to develop dementia. In studies like this, combining MCI and dementia as a single outcome can make the association appear stronger, but these are clinically distinct stages with different implications for patients and healthcare systems. MCI represents a risk state rather than established disease, so interpreting results as prediction of dementia needs caution, particularly when considering how such biomarkers might be used in real world clinical decision making. The bigger question now is how these biomarkers translate into real world clinical practice. Dementia in older adults is often caused by several overlapping brain diseases, and research cohorts are not always representative of routine healthcare populations; p-tau217 also only tells you about Alzheimer's disease specifically. Understanding how tests like p-tau217 perform in everyday clinical settings, and whether they meaningfully improve diagnosis and care in a cost effective way, will be critical before they can be widely used.

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