This seems like a mixed blessing to me!
‘Game changer’ Alzheimer’s blood test cleared in the US
Gerry Smith and Robert Langreth
May 17, 2025 – 10.09pm
US regulators have approved the first blood test to help diagnose Alzheimer’s disease, potentially making it easier to find and treat patients with the mind-robbing disease that affects nearly 7 million Americans.
The test made by Fujirebio Diagnostics a unit of Japan’s H.U. Group Holdings was cleared for people 55 years and older who exhibit signs and symptoms of the disease, the US Food and Drug Administration said in a statement.
It is designed for the early detection of amyloid, a protein that can build up in the brain and is a hallmark of Alzheimer’s, the most common form of dementia in the elderly.
The development and approval of blood tests that can spot which patients are likely to have toxic amyloid in their brains has been viewed as a critical step toward making drugs to treat the condition more widely accessible.
While the test is approved for people who are already exhibiting signs of cognitive impairment, studies show amyloid begins accumulating in the brains of some patients years before symptoms begin.
Howard Fillit, cofounder and chief science officer at the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, called the approval “a major milestone for patients and clinicians.”
“The ability to diagnose Alzheimer’s earlier with a simple blood test, like we do for cholesterol, is a game changer, allowing more patients to receive treatment options that have the potential to significantly slow or even prevent the disease,” Fillit said in a statement.
To qualify for drug treatment, Alzheimer’s patients now generally get a specialised PET scan to detect amyloid in their brains or undergo a cerebrospinal fluid test. The PET scans are expensive and require specialised equipment, while the spinal fluid tests involve an invasive procedure.
The need for these tests has slowed the rollout of new Alzheimer’s drugs like Leqembi from Eisai and Biogen and Eli Lilly & Co’s Kisunla.
The FDA approval was a “much-needed win” for the companies whose treatments have struggled to gain traction due to logistical hurdles, said Evan Seigerman, an analyst at BMO Capital Markets.
“Not a sea change, but today’s announcement could start to help these franchises gain some more momentum,” Seigerman wrote in a note to clients.
Fujirebio’s newly approved test, called Lumipulse, only requires a blood draw, making it less invasive and potentially easier for patients to access. It’s unclear how much it will cost or when it will be available. It’s intended for patients at a specialised care setting who are experiencing cognitive decline, according to the FDA.
The blood test shouldn’t be used alone to diagnose the disease, in part because of the risk of false positive or negative results, the agency said. Other clinical evaluations and additional tests should be used to determine treatment options, it said.
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This is a test I would hope I never need and, if positive, that I would be sufficiently far gone not to be able to understand or care what the result was!
I don’t know how others feel but I would hope that I would be past caring what the result was when the test was done, and found to be positive. I guess the point of doing the test is to exclude other (treatable) causes of dementia so sensible conservative care can be initiated and the individual made as comfortable as possible while awaiting the inevitable.
Where do others see a blood test of this sort fitting in, if at all?
David.
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