Resumen
As Alzheimer's disease remains a clinical diagnosis, and as clinical diagnosis can be difficult, it makes sense to look for so-called biomarkers. A biomarker predicts who is likely to have the illness and who is not. Some biomarkers might even correlate with a clinically meaningful response to treatment. Developing biomarkers is often characterized as searching for a diagnostic gold standard that can seem appealing in its promise of certainty. Even so, considering both the economic history of the gold standard and the results of neuropathological studies, framing the search for measurable, biological correlates of dementia syndromes in this way is likely to be self-defeating. Instead of considering biomarkers as providing certainty through referent criterion validation, currently it makes more sense to test their construct validity and their predictive ability. This means that while biomarkers should inform, they will not dictate clinical meaningfulness. For the foreseeable future, even were they to inform diagnosis, biomarkers cannot substitute for understanding whether patients and caregivers find a given dementia treatment effective. Instead, clinicians should recognize their own determining role, both in dementia diagnosis and in the evaluation of treatment. These roles will best be executed by hearing what patients and caregivers tell us about dementia, and its response to treatment.
Idioma original | English |
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Número de artículo | 16 |
Publicación | Alzheimer's Research and Therapy |
Volumen | 2 |
N.º | 3 |
DOI | |
Estado | Published - 2010 |
Nota bibliográfica
Funding Information:This paper endorses the systematic assessment of patient and caregiver preferences in dementia, which is facilitated by software commercialized by DementiaGuide Inc., of which the author is president, chief scientific offi cer and majority shareholder. KR receives career support from the Dalhousie Medical Research Foundation as the Kathryn Allen Weldon Professor of Alzheimer Research. Support for the research summarized in the present article came from the Canadian Institutes for Health Research, Janssen Ortho Canada, the Alzheimer Society of Canada, the Mathematics of Information Technology and Computer Science program of the Canadian Research Network, and the Fountain Innovation Fund of the Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Foundation. DementiaGuide Inc. has received funding from the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency, and the National Research Council of Canada, through the Industrial Research Assistance Program.
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Neurology
- Clinical Neurology
- Cognitive Neuroscience