RESUMO
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: ATN (ß-amyloid [Aß], tau, neurodegeneration) system categorizes individuals based on their core Alzheimer disease (AD) biomarkers. An important potential future use for ATN is therapeutic decision-making in clinical practice once disease-modifying treatments (e.g., anti-amyloid), become widely available. In this cross-sectional study, we applied ATN and estimated potential eligibility for anti-amyloid treatment in a real-life memory clinic with biomarker assessments integrated into the routine diagnostic procedure and all specialized resources available for the implementation of novel treatments. METHODS: We included all consecutive patients at the Karolinska University Hospital Memory clinic in Solna, Stockholm, Sweden, who had their first diagnostic visit in April 2018-February 2021, informed consent for the clinic research database, and available clinical and biomarker (CSF and imaging) data. ATN classification was based on CSF Aß42 (or Aß42/40; A), CSF phosphorylated tau (T), and medial temporal lobe atrophy (N). For CSF markers, we applied laboratory cutoffs and data-driven cutoffs for comparison (determined with Gaussian mixture modeling). Eligibility for anti-amyloid treatment was assessed following the published recommendations for aducanumab (AD dementia or mild cognitive impairment [MCI] with no evidence of non-AD etiology, appropriate level of cognition, and AD-consistent CSF profile). RESULTS: The study population consisted of 410 patients (52% subjective cognitive impairment, 23% MCI, and 25% any dementia; age 59 ± 7 years, 56% women). Regardless of biomarker cutoffs, most patients were A-T-N- (54%-57%). A+ prevalence was 17%-30% (higher with data-driven cutoffs). Up to 13% of all patients (27% of those with MCI and 28% of those with dementia) were potentially eligible for anti-amyloid treatment when AD-consistent CSF was defined as any A+ profile. When A+T+ profile was required, treatment was targeted more to the dementia than MCI stage (eligibility up to 14% in MCI and 22% in dementia). The opposite applied to earlier-stage intervention (A+T-N-; eligibility up to 12% in MCI and 2% in dementia). DISCUSSION: In a memory clinic setting with all necessary infrastructure and national guidelines in place for dementia diagnostic examination (best-case scenario), most of the patients did not meet the eligibility criteria for anti-amyloid treatment. Continuing the development of disease-modifying treatments with different mechanisms of action is a priority.