What is the FDA-approved p-tau217 blood test?
The p-tau217 blood test is a plasma biomarker assay the FDA approved in May 2025 for Alzheimer disease detection. Using a two-cutoff method, it reaches 97 percent accuracy in identifying Alzheimer pathology. Plasma p-tau217 correlates strongly with brain amyloid and tau PET imaging but at a fraction of the cost and without radiation exposure. Because the pathological changes it detects occur 15 to 20 years before symptoms emerge, the test enables a true preclinical window for prevention, which is especially valuable for APOE4 carriers.
How accurate is the p-tau217 test for detecting Alzheimer disease?
With a two-cutoff interpretation strategy, plasma p-tau217 reaches 97 percent accuracy for identifying Alzheimer pathology, according to research presented at AAIC 2025. The two-cutoff method uses one threshold to rule out disease and a higher threshold to rule in disease, leaving an intermediate zone for follow-up testing. This approach avoids forcing single-value decisions and preserves high sensitivity and specificity simultaneously. Phoenix covered nine biomarker breakthrough presentations in its full AAIC 2025 analysis.
What is the QGRE 6-minute MRI and why does it matter?
QGRE is a novel MRI-based biomarker developed at Washington University in St. Louis. Presented by Satya Kothapalli at AAIC 2025, it can detect 5 to 10 percent neuron loss compared to the 20 to 30 percent required for standard MRI to show change. The 6-minute scan captures pre-atrophic neurodegeneration coinciding with early amyloid accumulation, meaning it catches neuronal injury far earlier than traditional imaging. For APOE4 carriers focused on early intervention, this sensitivity opens a wider preclinical window.
What is MTBR tau and why is it being measured?
MTBR stands for microtubule-binding region, a fragment of tau that researchers consider its most dangerous form in Alzheimer disease. Fernando Gonzalez-Ortiz from the University of Gothenburg presented novel MTBR-specific immunoassays including MTBR-1 and MTBR-pTau262 at AAIC 2025 that measure these species at 10 picograms per milliliter. Tracking MTBR tau gives a more specific view of pathological tau than total tau or standard phosphorylated tau, helping distinguish Alzheimer-specific processes from other neurodegenerative changes.
What is the NIH Mobile Toolbox for preclinical Alzheimer detection?
The Mobile Toolbox is a remote smartphone-based cognitive assessment developed with NIH support. Roos Jutten from Alzheimer Center Amsterdam presented findings at AAIC 2025 showing it can capture cognitive change in preclinical Alzheimer disease, detecting subtle changes up to 7 years earlier than traditional testing. It works by catching the loss of practice effect, where individuals who would normally improve with repeated testing fail to do so, an early signal of cognitive decline. Combined with blood biomarkers, it creates a low-cost preclinical screening stack.