Washington: Researchers have found a biomarker that identifies a rare brain disease called Corticobasal Degeneration (CBD) with higher accuracy than traditional diagnostic methods, according to a study. The biomarker that identifies a primary tauopathy increases CBD detection accuracy to 89 per cent compared to traditional methods that are only 25 per cent to 50 per cent accurate, scientists at the Washington University said.
Primary tauopathies are a group of rare brain diseases marked by rapidly worsening problems with thinking and movement, the study published in Nature Medicine said. CBD is a rare condition that can cause gradually worsening problems with movement, speech, memory and swallowing, and is one of the tauopathies.
The biomarker could be developed into a tool to screen potential volunteers for CBD-specific research studies and clinical trials and, eventually, to identify people who could benefit from CBD-specific treatments, the scientists said. "Before, the only way to find out which primary tauopathy a person had was to wait until they died and then examine the person's brain under a microscope," said co-senior author Chihiro Sato.
"A patient comes in with stiffness, balance problems, slurred speech and memory issues, and it could be CBD, but it also could be Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) or Alzheimer's or other diseases. "This biomarker can reliably identify people with CBD, which means we can use it to enroll people in clinical trials. And, down the road, it may be key to initiating therapies," said Sato.
CBD is one of about two dozen brain diseases that are considered tauopathies because they share one critical feature: toxic tau aggregates in the brain. Tau tangles are abnormal accumulations of a protein called tau that collect inside neurons. In healthy neurons, tau normally binds to and stabilizes microtubules. However, in conditions such as in Alzheimer's disease, abnormal chemical changes cause tau to detach from microtubules and stick to other tau molecules, forming threads that eventually join to form tau tangles inside neurons.
Individual tauopathies involve different subtypes of tau and exhibit different patterns of damage to brain cells and tissues. The collections of symptoms of the various tauopathies overlap, making it difficult for doctors to tell one from another. This complicates efforts to study them and find treatments, the study said.