Amyloid beta peptide ratio 42/40 but not A beta 42 correlates with phospho-Tau in patients with low- and high-CSF A beta 40 load.

  • Jens Wiltfang
  • Hermann Esselmann
  • Mirko Bibl
  • Michael Hüll
  • Harald Hampel
  • Holger Kessler
  • Lutz Frölich
  • Johannes Schröder
  • Oliver Peters
  • Frank Jessen
  • Christian Luckhaus
  • Robert Perneczky
  • Holger Jahn
  • Magdalena Fiszer
  • Juan Manuel Maler
  • Rüdiger Zimmermann
  • Ralf Bruckmoser
  • Johannes Kornhuber
  • Piotr Lewczuk

Abstract

Neurochemical dementia diagnostics (NDD) can significantly improve the clinically based categorization of patients with early dementia disorders, and the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) concentrations of amyloid beta peptides ending at the amino acid position of 42 (A beta x-42 and A beta 1-42) are widely accepted biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, in subjects with constitutively high- or low-CSF concentrations of total A beta peptides (tA beta), the NDD interpretation might lead to erroneous conclusions as these biomarkers seem to correlate better with the total A beta load than with the pathological status of a given patient in such cases. In this multicenter study, we found significantly increased CSF concentrations of phosphorylated Tau (pTau181) and total Tau in the group of subjects with high CSF A beta x-40 concentrations and decreased A beta x-42/x-40 concentration ratio compared with the group of subjects with low CSF A beta x-40 and normal A beta ratio (p

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number4
ISSN0022-3042
Publication statusPublished - 2007
pubmed 17254013