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A study of 2,684 healthy older adults found that the highest levels of p-tau217 corresponded to a 38 percent chance of cognitive impairment within five years and 78 percent within ten years. Researchers published the results in JAMA and presented them at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference in London.
theconversation.comIndividuals with the highest levels of the blood marker p-tau217 faced a 38 percent probability of developing cognitive impairment within five years and a 78 percent probability within ten years, according to a study of 2,684 healthy older adults. Researchers measured p-tau217 blood levels at enrollment and conducted annual cognitive assessments.
Over the follow-up period, 478 participants developed cognitive impairment.
The findings were published in JAMA and presented at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference in London. The test is currently used to help diagnose whether people already experiencing cognitive problems have Alzheimer's disease or another condition. Dr.
Reisa Sperling of the Mass General Brigham Neuroscience Institute, the study's senior author, advised healthy individuals to wait for testing until treatments become available. "Wait and get tested when you can potentially do something about it," she said. " Drs.
Suzanne Schindler of Washington University in St. Louis and David Wolk of the University of Pennsylvania wrote in an accompanying JAMA editorial that the test is not yet precise enough for individualized prognosis. They described the results as a crucial piece of the puzzle.
Jessica Langbaum of the Banner Alzheimer's Institute said people with a family history of Alzheimer's are already requesting the test, though she does not recommend it outside research settings. She noted that a predictive test would become important if trials show drugs can prevent or delay Alzheimer's before symptoms appear.
Only a small fraction of participants had been followed for a full decade.
theconservativetreehouse.comNpr reported that federal policy changes disrupted cancer disparities research. The cancellations affected 93 percent of surveyed researchers and led to staff reductions at major registries.
news.sky.comThe Met Office published analysis showing temperatures once viewed as extreme have become typical across Britain. 2025 ranked as the warmest year since records began in 1884.
nypost.comThe World Health Organization said Tuesday that 80 percent of new cases come from unknown transmission chains. As of Monday, 1,926 infections and 702 deaths have been recorded across three provinces.