Amyloid beta peptides in plasma in early diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease: A multicenter study with multiplexing.

  • P Lewczuk
  • J Kornhuber
  • E Vanmechelen
  • O Peters
  • I Heuser
  • W Maier
  • F Jessen
  • K Bürger
  • H Hampel
  • L Frölich
  • F Henn
  • P Falkai
  • E Rüther
  • Holger Jahn
  • Ch Luckhaus
  • R Perneczky
  • K Schmidtke
  • J Schröder
  • H Kessler
  • J Pantel
  • H-J Gertz
  • H Vanderstichele
  • G de Meyer
  • F Shapiro
  • S Wolf
  • M Bibl
  • J Wiltfang

Abstract

We measured concentrations of Abeta peptides 1-42 and 1-40, and their ratio in plasma of patients carefully categorized clinically and neurochemically as having AD or other dementias with a newly commercially available multiplexing assay, characterized by reasonable laboratory performance (intra-assay imprecision in the range of 1.3-3.8% for Abeta1-42, and 1.8-4.1% for Abeta1-40, inter-assay imprecision for Abeta1-42, Abeta1-40, and Abeta1-42/Abeta1-40 concentration ratio in the range of 2.3-11.5%, 2.2-10.4% and 4.2-9.7%, respectively). Patients with AD or mild cognitive impairment of AD type (MCI-AD) whose clinical diagnosis was supported with CSF biomarkers (n=193) had significantly lower Abeta1-42 plasma concentrations (p

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
ISSN0014-4886
Publication statusPublished - 2009
pubmed 19664622