Researchers analyzed brain scan data from 3,293 people across eight different neuroimaging studies to understand how Alzheimer's-related proteins spread in the brain. They looked at PET scans that show amyloid plaques and tau tangles, two proteins that build up in Alzheimer's disease.
The analysis revealed a six-stage pattern: two stages where amyloid spreads first, followed by four stages where tau spreads to different brain regions. This staging model was associated with how people's thinking abilities declined over time. When compared to current clinical disease stages, the model showed that people with similar protein patterns could have different symptoms.
This was an observational study that looked at existing data, so it shows patterns but doesn't prove that the protein spread causes cognitive decline. The research helps scientists understand how Alzheimer's progresses in the brain, but it's not yet ready to change how doctors diagnose or treat patients. More research is needed to see if this staging model could eventually help with earlier detection or tracking disease progression.