Abstract
Alzheimers Dement. 2026 May;22(5):e71424. doi: 10.1002/alz.71424.
ABSTRACT
The 2025 Leon Thal Summit convened an international panel of clinicians, neuroscientists, neuropathologists, and neuroimaging specialists to evaluate the current state of biomarker development for chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) and to outline priorities for advancing translational research for this important area. Discussions integrated emerging findings from longitudinal cohorts, new molecular and neuroimaging approaches, expanding post mortem evidence, and evolving insights into exposure biology and genetic modifiers. Consensus themes emphasized the need for biomarkers that detect CTE-specific tau proteoforms, integration of existing imaging and fluid markers into traumatic encephalopathy syndrome research criteria, and refinement of multimodal magnetic resonance imaging and blood-based tools that capture early CTE pathology. The group underscored the importance of coordinated, longitudinal clinicopathological studies and collaborative research frameworks to validate candidate biomarkers and accelerate progress toward accurate diagnosis, disease monitoring, and therapeutic development for individuals at risk for or exhibiting signs of CTE.
PMID:42121201 | DOI:10.1002/alz.71424
UK DRI Authors