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medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Published

Presymptomatic plasma biomarkers in autosomal dominant Alzheimer's disease: sequence and timing

Authors

Christopher R S Belder, Amanda J Heslegrave, Owen Swann, Emily Abel, Millie Beament, Moneeb Nasir, Helen Rice, Philip S J Weston, Natalie S Ryan, Lyle J Palmer, Amy Brodtmann, Timothy Kleinig, Henrik Zetterberg, Nick C Fox

Abstract

medRxiv [Preprint]. 2026 Mar 31:2026.03.30.26349682. doi: 10.64898/2026.03.30.26349682.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Autosomal dominant Alzheimer's disease (ADAD) serves as a model for presymptomatic biomarker discovery. Characterising the temporal profile of plasma biomarker levels in presymptomatic individuals may enhance understanding of disease pathogenesis, inform future clinical trials, and guide clinical interpretation.

METHODS: We evaluated 124 proteins using a NUcleic acid-Linked Immuno-Sandwich Assay (NULISA) panel in 270 plasma samples from a longitudinal cohort study of ADAD, comprising 113 individuals (73 mutation carriers and 40 non-carriers). We determined the plasma proteomic changes that distinguished mutation carriers from non-carriers. We then used predicted age at symptom onset to determine the approximate timing of presymptomatic divergence in biomarker levels in carriers relative to non-carriers.

RESULTS: Nine proteins (Aβ42, BACE1, GFAP, pTau181, pTau231, pTau217, MAPT, NfL, and AChE) robustly differed between carriers and non-carriers, cross-sectionally. Longitudinal analyses showed Aβ42 levels were elevated in carriers at least 26 years before expected symptom onset. Carriers diverged from non-carriers in phosphorylated tau markers at 21-24 years before expected symptoms, total-tau at 19 years, GFAP and BACE1 at 14 years, and NfL at 6 years. Differences in AChE were seen in symptomatic individuals, likely reflecting cholinesterase inhibitor use.

CONCLUSION: Multiple plasma proteins are elevated in presymptomatic and symptomatic autosomal dominant AD mutation carriers relative to non-carriers. Changes in eight biomarkers occur sequentially from 26 to 6 years prior to symptom onset. Combining biomarkers may help in staging presymptomatic AD and optimise clinical trial inclusion. Further work is needed to assess how these findings generalise to non-monogenic AD.

PMID:41959760 | PMC:PMC13060447 | DOI:10.64898/2026.03.30.26349682

UK DRI Authors

Owen Swann

Research Technician, UK DRI Biomarker Factory

Owen Swann

Emily Abel

Research Technician and PhD Student

Emily Abel

Prof Henrik Zetterberg

Group Leader

Pioneering the development of fluid biomarkers for dementia

Prof Henrik Zetterberg