Imagine getting a simple blood test that could help tell if your memory loss is from Alzheimer's or a different brain disease. That's the hope behind this study.
Researchers analyzed blood proteins from 101 people in an Asian cohort with known pTau217 status. They found 1,168 proteins were different in Alzheimer's and 370 in frontotemporal dementia. These protein signatures pointed to brain inflammation, synaptic problems, immune activity, and metabolism. Some of these proteins also correlated with cognitive performance and known biomarkers like phosphorylated tau and neurofilament light chain. The patterns matched well with other large datasets.
But this is an observational study, so it shows links, not cause and effect. The findings are preliminary and only from one ethnic group, with no tissue validation. It's a step toward a blood-based tool, not a proven diagnostic yet.
The big picture: this supports a scalable way to find blood-based targets for precision diagnosis, but it's early days.