2026年7月15日 美国东部时间上午7:40 / 美联社
华盛顿——研究人员周三报告称,一种血液检测方法或可预测看似健康的老年人在未来5至10年内是否会出现阿尔茨海默病症状。
这类信息可能让人安心,也可能令人恐惧,但就目前而言,它有望成为加速药物研发的潜在工具,帮助识别高风险人群并将其纳入阿尔茨海默病潜在治疗或预防策略的研究。
目前已有大型临床试验正在测试某些药物能否预防或至少延缓该疾病——如果这些试验取得成功,医生将需要一种简便方法来确定哪些人适合使用这些药物。
这项新研究的研究人员强调,健康人群目前还不应去寻求所谓的p-tau217检测,该检测目前主要用于帮助诊断出现认知问题的患者是否患有阿尔茨海默病或其他障碍。
“先等等,等你真的有办法采取干预措施时再做检测,”该研究的资深作者、麻省总医院布里格姆神经科学研究所的蕾莎·斯珀林博士强调道,“就目前而言,这项检测不会改变我给患者的建议。我还是会告诉他们要健康饮食、保证睡眠、多运动并保持社交参与。”
新研究结果显示,体内p-tau217水平极高的无症状老年人在5年内出现认知障碍的风险为38%。到10年时,这一风险升至78%。
该研究成果发表在《美国医学会杂志》(JAMA)上,并在伦敦举行的阿尔茨海默病协会国际会议上进行了展示。
目前尚不清楚阿尔茨海默病的确切病因,但该病的标志性特征是堵塞大脑的淀粉样蛋白斑块和杀伤神经元的tau蛋白缠结。斯珀林表示,p-tau217检测可以测量一种tau蛋白形式,该蛋白与患者体内的斑块堆积程度相关,并能提示tau蛋白缠结的情况。
研究细节
麻省总医院布里格姆团队分析了2684名老年人的数据,这些老年人在加入一些长期阿尔茨海默病研究项目时身体都很健康,在入组时接受了p-tau217血液检测,并每年进行认知检查。从2004年最早入组到去年,约有478人出现了认知障碍。
在5至10年的随访期内,p-tau217水平极低的研究参与者出现认知障碍的风险同样较低。
阿尔茨海默病预测面临一个难题:许多人脑部淀粉样蛋白斑块水平很高,但从未患上痴呆症。一种主流理论认为,淀粉样蛋白堆积在某个时刻会触发异常tau蛋白形成缠结,进而引发症状。
斯珀林表示,血液检测数据提供了一些新线索。虽然不同中等水平的p-tau217预示着不同程度的进展风险,但只有极高水平的p-tau217似乎与该转折点的其他相关证据存在关联。
“这是一个循序渐进的过程,淀粉样蛋白和tau蛋白在大脑中不断堆积,而这种血液生物标志物能告诉你在这个过程中处于哪个阶段,”她说。
部分专家呼吁“别操之过急”
未参与该研究的科学家对这项研究表示赞赏,但也提出了一些需要谨慎对待的理由。其中一个原因是,只有一小部分研究参与者接受了完整10年的跟踪调查,因此与5年风险评估相比,人们对10年风险评估的信心更低。
圣路易斯华盛顿大学的苏珊娜·辛德勒博士和宾夕法尼亚大学的戴维·沃尔克博士在发表于《美国医学会杂志》的一篇评论中指出,此外,其他因素可能会干扰预测结果——老年人可能因其他疾病死亡,或患有可能引发血管性痴呆而非阿尔茨海默病的心脏相关问题。
辛德勒博士也在研究p-tau217的预后潜力,她和沃尔克博士写道,血液检测“目前尚不够精准,无法指导个体化预后判断”。不过,他们也表示,这项新研究“为解开这个谜题提供了至关重要的一环”。
凤凰城班纳阿尔茨海默病研究所的杰西卡·兰格鲍姆表示,目前“已经有人来找我说‘我想要做这种血液检测,我有阿尔茨海默病家族史’”,她强烈建议这类人群暂时不要做检测。
“这些研究结果相当有说服力,”兰格鲍姆补充道,预测性血液检测将“非常重要”——但前提是正在进行的研究最终能找到一种能在症状出现前帮助患者的药物。
阿尔茨海默病的前景临床试验
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/promising-clinical-trials-in-alzheimers-prevention/
阿尔茨海默病预防领域的前景临床试验
(09:26)
Alzheimer’s blood test may predict who’s likely to develop symptoms in 5 to10 years
July 15, 2026 7:40 AM EDT / AP
Washington— A blood test may predict if apparently healthy older adults are likely to develop Alzheimer’s symptoms in the next five or 10 years, researchers reported Wednesday.
That information could be reassuring or terrifying, but for now it’s a potential tool to speed drug development by helping to identify and enroll high-risk people into studies of possible Alzheimer’s treatments or preventive strategies.
Already large clinical trials are testing if certain drugs could prevent or at least delay the disease – and if any of those pan out, doctors will need an easy way to tell who should try them.
The scientists behind the new study stress that it’s too soon for healthy people to seek out the so-called p-tau217 test, which is currently used to help diagnose whether people experiencing cognitive problems have Alzheimer’s or another disorder.
“Wait and get tested when you can potentially do something about it,” stressed Dr. Reisa Sperling of the Mass General Brigham Neuroscience Institute, the study’s senior author. “At this point, it wouldn’t change what I would tell someone to do. I’d still tell them to eat well, sleep well, exercise a lot and stay engaged.”
The new findings showed that symptom-free older adults who harbored very high levels of p-tau217 had a 38% risk of developing cognitive impairment over five years. That risk grew to 78% by 10 years.
The research was published in JAMA and presented at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference in London.
It’s not clear exactly what causes Alzheimer’s, but its telltale markers are brain-clogging amyloid plaques and neuron-killing tau tangles. The p-tau217 test measures a form of tau that correlates with how much plaque buildup someone has and gives a hint about tangles, Sperling said.
Details on the study
The Mass General Brigham team analyzed data from 2,684 older adults who were healthy when they’d joined some long-running Alzheimer’s studies, receiving the p-tau217 blood test at enrollment and yearly cognitive checkups. Between the earliest enrollment in 2004 and last year, about 478 had developed cognitive impairment.
Study participants with very low p-tau217 levels likewise had a low risk of developing cognitive impairment over the five- to 10-year period.
There’s a conundrum in predicting Alzheimer’s: Lots of people harbor high levels of amyloid plaques yet never get dementia. A leading theory is that at some point amyloid buildup triggers an abnormal type of tau to form tangles, leading to symptoms.
Sperling said the blood test data offers some new clues. While different intermediate levels of p-tau217 signaled progressive risk, only the very highest level seemed to correlate with other evidence about that tipping point.
“This is a gradual process where amyloid and tau build up in the brain and this blood-based biomarker is telling you how far you are in that process,” she said.
Some researchers say “not so fast”
Scientists not involved in the study praised it but also offered some reasons to be cautious. One is that only a small fraction of study participants had been tracked for a full decade, so there’s less confidence in the 10-year risk estimate than the five-year risk estimate.
Also, the predictions could be clouded by other factors – older people may be at risk of dying from something else, or have heart-related problems that can cause vascular dementia rather than Alzheimer’s, noted Drs. Suzanne Schindler of Washington University in St. Louis and David Wolk of the University of Pennsylvania in a commentary published in JAMA.
The blood tests “are not yet precise enough to guide individualized prognosis,” wrote Schindler, who also studies p-tau217’s prognostic potential, and Wolk. Still, they said the new work has “provided a crucial piece of the puzzle.”
Already “we have people coming saying, ‘I want this blood test. I have a family history of Alzheimer’s disease,’” said Jessica Langbaum of the Banner Alzheimer’s Institute in Phoenix, something she strongly discourages – for now.
“These findings are quite strong,” Langbaum added, and a predictive blood test would be “really important” – but only if ongoing studies eventually find a drug that could help people before symptoms begin.
Promising clinical trials for Alzheimer’s
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/promising-clinical-trials-in-alzheimers-prevention/
Promising clinical trials in Alzheimer’s prevention
(09:26)
发表回复