Test Code RPDEI Rapidly Progressive Dementia Evaluation Interpretation, Spinal Fluid
Useful For
Interpretation of the Rapidly Progressive Dementia Evaluation
Method Name
Only orderable as part of a profile. For more information see RPDE / Rapidly Progressive Dementia Evaluation, Spinal Fluid
Reporting Name
RPD Eval Interp, CSFSpecimen Type
CSFSpecimen Stability Information
Specimen Type | Temperature | Time | Special Container |
---|---|---|---|
CSF | Frozen (preferred) | 28 days | BlueTop SARSTEDT |
Refrigerated | 14 days | BlueTop SARSTEDT | |
Ambient | 12 hours | BlueTop SARSTEDT |
Clinical Information
Primary rapid progressive dementia (RPD) occurs in human prion diseases, rapidly progressive types of other neurodegenerative dementias (Lewy Body dementia, Alzheimer disease), autoimmune central nervous system (CNS) disorders and other conditions that involved rapid neuronal damage. Based on data from tertiary medical centers, when there is high clinical suspicion of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), a majority will be proven to be CJD upon autopsy. However, in those where CJD has been ruled out either by additional diagnostic testing or autopsy, the most common differential diagnoses include rapidly progressive Alzheimer disease or autoimmune CNS disease. Distinguishing these diseases is often challenging, and the use of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarker testing is an important tool in establishing the correct diagnosis.
CJD is a rare and fatal neurodegenerative disorder that predominantly affects the brain and is caused by misfolded prion proteins (PrP[Sc]). CJD accounts for more than 90% of human prion diseases. Initial symptom onset is heterogenous but commonly includes rapidly progressive dementia, cerebellar ataxia, and myoclonus. The timeline of symptom progression and the pattern of symptom evolution can be divergent across patients and CJD subtypes, making an accurate diagnosis based on clinical presentation alone challenging. The inclusion of biomarkers with high diagnostic accuracy has improved the differentiation of CJD and related prion diseases from treatable neurological conditions with overlapping phenotypes. The real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) assay in CSF has been established to have strong clinical utility for early and accurate diagnosis of CJD through numerous independent studies. Furthermore, the robustness and reproducibility of the RT-QuIC assay for CJD across laboratories has been demonstrated through international ring trials. The clinical sensitivity and specificity of second-generation RT-QuIC assays in CSF have been consistently reported to be greater than or equal to 92% and greater than or equal to 99%, respectively. Despite the high diagnostic accuracy of the assay, RT-QuIC results should be interpreted in the appropriate clinical context along with other clinical and paraclinical findings. A definitive diagnosis of sporadic prion disease can be established only through neuropathological assessment of brain tissue.
Unexpectedly negative RT-QuIC test results should prompt careful consideration of the differential diagnosis. If there is high suspicion of prion disease, repeat RT-QuIC testing may be warranted. A small subset of cases initially negative by RT-QuIC may become positive as the disease progresses. However, RT-QuIC may be persistently negative in a small proportion of patients with definite prion disease. False-negative RT-QuIC results are most often encountered in cases of genetic prion disease (eg, fatal familial insomnia and Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker disease) and in atypical sporadic prion disease subtypes (eg, MM2 cortical subtype) that have slower indolent disease progression.
Other CSF biomarkers have been utilized to support the diagnosis of CJD, including 14-3-3, total Tau measurement, and the ratio of total Tau (t-Tau) to phosphorylated Tau at threonine 181. Recent studies have indicated that the Tau ratio (t-Tau to pT181-Tau or vice versa) has a very high diagnostic accuracy, which exceeds that provided by t-Tau or 14-3-3 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA). In a cohort of probable/definite CJD cases and controls tested utilizing the Roche Total-Tau and p-Tau (threonine 181) Elecsys assays, the optimized cut-off value for total Tau (>393 ng/L) had a clinical sensitivity and specificity of 92.3% and 88.3% for CJD, respectively; and the optimized cut-off value for the t-Tau to p-Tau ratio (>18) has a clinical sensitivity and specificity of 97.4% and 95.9% for CJD, respectively.
Importantly, t-Tau or t-Tau to p-Tau ratios utilize assay-dependent cut-off values, and cut-off values from one assay are not transferable to different assay platforms.
Alzheimer disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia. The pathologic changes observed in the brain of individuals with AD dementia are the presence of plaques composed of beta-amyloid (Abeta) peptides and intracellular neurofibrillary tangles containing hyperphosphorylated Tau (tubulin-associated unit) proteins. Accumulation of Abeta is one target for AD therapeutics. Accumulation of Abeta can be measured by amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) imaging or by measurement of Abeta42 peptides and certain phosphorylated Tau (such as p-Tau181) proteins in CSF. In particular, the use of the p-Tau181/Abeta42 ratio has been shown to be an excellent surrogate marker of amyloid plaque burden.
Abeta42 is approximately 4-kDa protein of 42 amino acids that is formed following proteolytic cleavage of a transmembrane protein known as amyloid precursor protein. Due to its hydrophobic nature, Abeta42 has the propensity to form aggregates and oligomers. Oligomers form fibrils that accumulate into amyloid plaques. These pathological changes in Abeta42 are reflected by the decrease in the CSF concentrations of Abeta42 and/or by the increase in the brain uptake of specific tracers during amyloid-PET.
Tau is present as six isoforms in human brain tissue. These isoforms are generated by alternative splicing of the pre-messenger RNA. The t-Tau assay measures all these isoforms. The most common post-translational modification of Tau proteins is phosphorylation. During neurodegeneration, abnormal phosphorylation leads to the formation of intracellular neurofibrillary tangles composed of the Tau protein that has undergone hyperphosphorylation and developed aggregates of hyperphosphorylated Tau proteins called p-Tau. Pathological changes associated with AD are reflected by an increase in the CSF concentrations of t-Tau and p-Tau. Increases in CSF t-Tau concentrations reflect the intensity of the neuronal and axonal damage and degeneration and are associated with a faster progression from mild cognitive impairment (MCI) to AD. Increases in CSF p-Tau concentrations are also associated with a faster progression from MCI to AD with more rapid cognitive decline in patients with AD and in mild AD dementia cases. The p-Tau assay used in this evaluation detects p-Tau at threonine 181.
Reference Values
Only orderable as part of a profile. For more information see RPDE / Rapidly Progressive Dementia Evaluation, Spinal Fluid.
An interpretive report will be provided.
Day(s) Performed
Varies