Half of Alzheimer’s cases misdiagnosed

This blog post by Dr. Sanjay Gupta (of CNN) is about the low diagnostic accuracy rate of Alzheimer’s Disease. Over 400 brain autopsies were done on Japanese-American men. “Only about half of those who had a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s before death had the brain plaques that signal the disease. The dementia in the other half appeared to have been caused by abnormal protein deposits (known as Lewy bodies), stroke-related tissue death (microinfarcts), cell damage, or some combination thereof.”

Why is an accurate diagnosis important? “Ruling out other forms of dementia may help relatives plan for future care and determine their own risk for Alzheimer’s, for instance. Accurately diagnosing Alzheimer’s is even more critical for research on potential treatments.”

As many of you know, I’m a proponent of brain donation. If anyone wants help making these arrangements, I’m happy to volunteer my time to do this. It can never be too early to make these arrangements. A gentleman with a clinical diagnosis of Dementia with Lewy Bodies died this week. His wife and I made the brain donation arrangements nearly two years ago! She was very thankful that she didn’t have to stress over these arrangements when her husband’s death became imminent or after he died. All went according to plan.

I’ve copied the short blog post below and a link to it. This news article was posted today to an LBD-related online support group.

http://pagingdrgupta.blogs.cnn.com/2011 … diagnosed/

Paging Dr. Gupta: Blog by Dr. Sanjay Gupta
CNN Health
February 23rd, 2011

Half of Alzheimer’s cases misdiagnosed

Roughly half of the people who are told they have Alzheimer’s disease may in fact have other forms of dementia that produce similar symptoms, according to a new study.

Doctors have known for some time that the confusion and memory loss caused by the brain lesions associated with Alzheimer’s can also be caused by other types of brain changes, such as tissue damage stemming from strokes. The study suggests that it may be even harder than previously thought to identify the source of dementia while a patient is still alive, says lead researcher Lon White, M.D.

“There are at least five different kinds of important lesions which can produce a picture that looks like Alzheimer’s,” says White, a professor of geriatric medicine at the University of Hawaii in Honolulu. “Each of those five kinds of lesions is apparently driven by its own pathologic process, and having one doesn’t protect you from having others. All are independent and all are increasing with age.”

White and his colleagues performed brain autopsies—the only surefire way of diagnosing Alzheimer’s—on more than 400 elderly Japanese-American men. Only about half of those who had a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s before death had the brain plaques that signal the disease. The dementia in the other half appeared to have been caused by abnormal protein deposits (known as Lewy bodies), stroke-related tissue death (microinfarcts), cell damage, or some combination thereof.

The researchers have since completed another 400 or so autopsies with similar results, and will present their findings in April at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Neurology. Unlike studies published in medical journals, these findings are still preliminary and have yet to be thoroughly vetted by other experts in the field.

An Alzheimer’s misdiagnosis doesn’t have immediate consequences for the patient because no treatments exist that can stop the steady progression of the disease. And the drugs that, in some people, help slow Alzheimer’s or make it more tolerable appear to work for other types of dementia, White says.

Patients and their families can nevertheless benefit from an early and accurate diagnosis. Ruling out other forms of dementia may help relatives plan for future care and determine their own risk for Alzheimer’s, for instance.

Accurately diagnosing Alzheimer’s is even more critical for research on potential treatments. Without knowing precisely who has Alzheimer’s, pharmaceutical companies that have been developing new drugs “are not going to be able to see a true assessment of how effective their drug is,” White says.

Some promising advances in diagnosis have been made recently. A study published last year found that spinal fluid tests can predict Alzheimer’s with a high degree of accuracy, and the Food and Drug Administration is currently weighing the approval of a brain scan that uses dye to highlight the plaques characteristic of Alzheimer’s. The reliability of these methods needs to be confirmed, however.

“Everybody knows we need to do a better job of diagnosing,” says Maria Carrillo, Ph.D., the senior director of medical and scientific relations at the Alzheimer’s Association, a research and advocacy organization based in Chicago. “We are all trying to make that diagnosis better, earlier, faster. All of those things are currently under way in terms of research study.”