A blood biomarker test for brain amyloid impacts the clinical evaluation of cognitive impairment

Mark Monane, C2N Diagnostics, LLC
Kim G Johnson, Duke University
B Joy Snider, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
Raymond S Turner, Georgetown University
Jonathan D Drake, Brown University
Demetrius M Maraganore, Tulane University
James L Bicksel, Capital Neurology Services
Daniel H Jacobs, Neurology Services of Orlando
Julia L Ortega, C2N Diagnostics, LLC
Joni Henderson, C2N Diagnostics, LLC
Yan Jiang, Stat4ward
Shuguang Huang, Stat4ward
Justine Coppinger, C2N Diagnostics, LLC
Ilana Fogelman, C2N Diagnostics, LLC
Tim West, C2N Diagnostics, LLC
Joel B Braunstein, C2N Diagnostics, LLC

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to examine clinicians' patient selection and result interpretation of a clinically validated mass spectrometry test measuring amyloid beta and ApoE blood biomarkers combined with patient age (PrecivityAD® blood test) in symptomatic patients evaluated for Alzheimer's disease (AD) or other causes of cognitive decline.

METHODS: The Quality Improvement and Clinical Utility PrecivityAD Clinician Survey (QUIP I, ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05477056) was a prospective, single-arm cohort study among 366 patients evaluated by neurologists and other cognitive specialists. Participants underwent blood biomarker testing and received an amyloid probability score (APS), indicating the likelihood of a positive result on an amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) scan. The primary study outcomes were appropriateness of patient selection as well as result interpretation associated with PrecivityAD blood testing.

RESULTS: A 95% (347/366) concordance rate was noted between clinicians' patient selection and the test's intended use criteria. In the final analysis including these 347 patients (median age 75 years, 56% women), prespecified test result categories incorporated 133 (38%) low APS, 162 (47%) high APS, and 52 (15%) intermediate APS patients. Clinicians' pretest and posttest AD diagnosis probability changed from 58% to 23% in low APS patients and 71% to 89% in high APS patients (p < 0.0001). Anti-AD drug therapy decreased by 46% in low APS patients (p < 0.0001) and increased by 57% in high APS patients (p < 0.0001).

INTERPRETATION: These findings demonstrate the clinical utility of the PrecivityAD blood test in clinical care and may have added relevance as new AD therapies are introduced.