DeKosky Steven T, Ikonomovic Milos D, Wang Xiaoyan, Farlow Martin, Wisniewski Stephen, Lopez Oscar L, Becker James T, Saxton Judith, Klunk William E, Sweet Robert, Kaufer Daniel I, Kamboh M Ilyas
Department of Neurology and the Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, University of Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Ann Neurol. 2003 Jan;53(1):81-90. doi: 10.1002/ana.10414.
alpha-1-Antichymotrypsin (ACT) is present in neuritic plaques in which it participates in the inflammatory cascade of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Reports of blood ACT levels in AD, and its usefulness as a disease biomarker, have been conflicting. In an effort to clarify this, we measured plasma ACT levels in 516 white subjects including 359 subjects with probable or possible AD, 44 subjects with other late-life dementias, and 113 nondemented people. Subjects with systemic inflammatory diseases or who were taking antiinflammatory medications were excluded. All patients underwent extensive medical and detailed neuropsychological examinations at the time their blood was drawn. We found that plasma ACT levels were elevated in AD patients compared with the control group (p = 0.01) and were associated with severity of AD dementia; there was a negative association with the Mattis Dementia Rating Scale (a global measure of cognition) and a positive association with the Clinical Dementia Rating Scale (a global functional assessment). These relationships remained significant after controlling for demographic and genetic variables. When AD subjects were stratified into subgroups by dementia severity, matched by age, education, and gender, increased serum ACT correlated with Clinical Dementia Rating Scale (p = 0.0041) or Mattis Dementia Rating Scale (p = 0.0031) scores. ACT measurements in cerebrospinal fluid from an additional 34 AD cases and 16 controls showed elevated levels (p = 0.02) in AD. There was a negative correlation (p = 0.037) between cerebrospinal fluid ACT levels and clinical severity as measured by the Mini-Mental State Examination. Our results demonstrate that peripheral ACT levels are elevated in AD, but not in dementias other than AD, and they increase with progression of AD dementia. Although not useful as a diagnostic biomarker, ACT may reflect disease severity and may be helpful as a within subject biomarker in interventions (particularly with antiinflammatory agents) directed at slowing or halting progression of disease.
α-1抗糜蛋白酶(ACT)存在于神经炎性斑块中,参与阿尔茨海默病(AD)的炎症级联反应。关于AD患者血液中ACT水平及其作为疾病生物标志物的效用的报道一直存在矛盾。为了澄清这一点,我们测量了516名白人受试者的血浆ACT水平,其中包括359名可能患有或疑似患有AD的受试者、44名患有其他老年期痴呆症的受试者以及113名未患痴呆症的人。排除患有全身性炎症性疾病或正在服用抗炎药物的受试者。所有患者在抽血时均接受了全面的医学检查和详细的神经心理学检查。我们发现,与对照组相比,AD患者的血浆ACT水平升高(p = 0.01),且与AD痴呆症的严重程度相关;与马蒂斯痴呆评定量表(一种认知的整体测量方法)呈负相关,与临床痴呆评定量表(一种整体功能评估)呈正相关。在控制了人口统计学和遗传变量后,这些关系仍然显著。当根据痴呆严重程度将AD受试者分层为亚组,并按年龄、教育程度和性别进行匹配时,血清ACT升高与临床痴呆评定量表(p = 0.0041)或马蒂斯痴呆评定量表(p = 0.0031)得分相关。对另外34例AD病例和16例对照的脑脊液进行ACT测量,结果显示AD患者的脑脊液ACT水平升高(p = 0.02)。脑脊液ACT水平与简易精神状态检查表所测量的临床严重程度之间存在负相关(p = 0.037)。我们的结果表明,AD患者外周ACT水平升高,但除AD以外的其他痴呆症患者外周ACT水平未升高,且外周ACT水平随AD痴呆症的进展而增加。虽然ACT作为诊断生物标志物并无用处,但它可能反映疾病严重程度,并且在针对减缓或阻止疾病进展的干预措施(特别是使用抗炎药物)中,作为个体内生物标志物可能会有所帮助。