好色先生

好色先生

Explore the latest content from across our publications

Log In

Forgot Password?
Create New Account

Loading... please wait

Abstract Details

Biomarkers for Differential Diagnosis Between Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy and Alzheimer's Disease: a Systematic Review
Blood Biomarkers
P1 - Poster Session 1 (7:00 AM-3:15 PM)
003
To assess the diagnostic utility of biomarkers that could differentiate Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) from Alzheimer’s Disease (AD).
CTE is a neurodegenerative disease associated with multiple head trauma. The diagnosis depends on neuropathological findings postmortem, and patients can present cognitive and behavioral changes. These symptoms can usually be mistaken for other dementias, such as AD, leading to an underestimated frequency of CTE. Therefore, specific biomarkers can be useful for comprehending disease development, diagnosis and prognosis.
We systematically searched the MEDLINE, Embase and Cochrane databases. We also searched the trial registries and reference lists of articles. We included studies that were relevant to the PICO question posed and analysed different biomarkers. We screened titles and abstracts and if they were pertinent, we assessed the full text and reported results narratively.
Twenty-two studies were identified through database searching. One study was excluded due to duplicity among the databases. Twenty-one articles were assessed for eligibility and six were included in the qualitative synthesis. P-Tau and T-tau proteins were indicated as biomarkers of neurodegenerative diseases such as CTE and AD, but not from other tauopathies. Exosomal tau levels are higher in CTE patients than in AD patients, and it might be useful since it is very stable, crosses the blood–brain barrier and reflects their cellular origin. Pathophysiological differences between CTE and AD are pointed out as a way to find specific biomarkers for CTE. The biomarkers associated with neuroaxonal damage (NFL), glial response with astroglial scarring (GFAP and sTREM2), and microvascular damage with disruption of the blood–brain barrier (cerebrospinal fluid/serum albumin ratio) are promising in that way.
Biomarkers that arise from pathophysiological processes distinct from the two diseases, appear to be promising. However, further well-designed studies are needed to assess the real utility of the biomarkers in differential diagnosis between CTE and AD.
Authors/Disclosures
Nicholas Kayode Da Silva Soyombo
PRESENTER
Mr. Da Silva Soyombo has nothing to disclose.
Emanuelle D. Rocha, MD (Base's Hospital, Neurology) Miss Rocha has nothing to disclose.
Larissa B. Xavier Miss Xavier has nothing to disclose.
Rafael A. Oliveira No disclosure on file
No disclosure on file