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Cambridge scientists have developed an artificially-intelligent tool capable of predicting in four cases out of five whether people with early signs of dementia will remain stable or develop Alzheimer鈥檚 disease.

We鈥檝e created a tool which is much more sensitive than current approaches at predicting whether someone will progress from mild symptoms to Alzheimer鈥檚

Zoe Kourtzi

探花直播team say this new approach could reduce the need for invasive and costly diagnostic tests while improving treatment outcomes early when interventions such as lifestyle changes or new medicines may have a chance to work best.

Dementia poses a significant global healthcare challenge, affecting over 55 million people worldwide at an estimated annual cost of $820 billion. 探花直播number of cases is expected to almost treble over the next 50 years.

探花直播main cause of dementia is Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, which accounts for 60-80% of cases. Early detection is crucial as this is when treatments are likely to be most effective, yet early dementia diagnosis and prognosis may not be accurate without the use of invasive or expensive tests such as positron emission tomography (PET) scans or lumbar puncture, which are not available in all memory clinics. As a result, up to a third of patients may be misdiagnosed and others diagnosed too late for treatment to be effective.

A team led by scientists from the Department of Psychology at the 探花直播 of Cambridge has developed a machine learning model able to predict whether and how fast an individual with mild memory and thinking problems will progress to developing Alzheimer鈥檚 disease. In research published today in eClinical Medicine, they show that it is more accurate than current clinical diagnostic tools.

To build their model, the researchers used routinely-collected, non-invasive, and low-cost patient data 鈥 cognitive tests and structural MRI scans showing grey matter atrophy 鈥 from over 400 individuals who were part of a research cohort in the USA.

They then tested the model using real-world patient data from a further 600 participants from the US cohort and 鈥 importantly 鈥 longitudinal data from 900 people from memory clinics in the UK and Singapore.

探花直播algorithm was able to distinguish between people with stable mild cognitive impairment and those who progressed to Alzheimer鈥檚 disease within a three-year period. It was able to correctly identify individuals who went on to develop Alzheimer鈥檚 in 82% of cases and correctly identify those who didn鈥檛 in 81% of cases from cognitive tests and an MRI scan alone.

探花直播algorithm was around three times more accurate at predicting the progression to Alzheimer鈥檚 than the current standard of care; that is, standard clinical markers (such as grey matter atrophy or cognitive scores) or clinical diagnosis. This shows that the model could significantly reduce misdiagnosis.

探花直播model also allowed the researchers to stratify people with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease using data from each person鈥檚 first visit at the memory clinic into three groups: those whose symptoms would remain stable (around 50% of participants), those who would progress to Alzheimer鈥檚 slowly (around 35%) and those who would progress more rapidly (the remaining 15%). These predictions were validated when looking at follow-up data over 6 years. This is important as it could help identify those people at an early enough stage that they may benefit from new treatments, while also identifying those people who need close monitoring as their condition is likely to deteriorate rapidly.

Importantly, those 50% of people who have symptoms such as memory loss but remain stable, would be better directed to a different clinical pathway as their symptoms may be due to other causes rather than dementia, such as anxiety or depression.

Senior author Professor Zoe Kourtzi from the Department of Psychology at the 探花直播 of Cambridge said: 鈥淲e鈥檝e created a tool which, despite using only data from cognitive tests and MRI scans, is much more sensitive than current approaches at predicting whether someone will progress from mild symptoms to Alzheimer鈥檚 鈥 and if so, whether this progress will be fast or slow.

鈥淭his has the potential to significantly improve patient wellbeing, showing us which people need closest care, while removing the anxiety for those patients we predict will remain stable. At a time of intense pressure on healthcare resources, this will also help remove the need for unnecessary invasive and costly diagnostic tests.鈥

While the researchers tested the algorithm on data from a research cohort, it was validated using independent data that included almost 900 individuals who attended memory clinics in the UK and Singapore. In the UK, patients were recruited through the Quantiative MRI in NHS Memory Clinics Study (QMIN-MC) led by study co-author Dr Timothy Rittman at Cambridge 探花直播 Hospitals NHS Trust and Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trusts (CPFT).

探花直播researchers say this shows it should be applicable in a real-world patient, clinical setting.

Dr Ben Underwood, Honorary Consultant Psychiatrist at CPFT and assistant professor at the Department of Psychiatry, 探花直播 of Cambridge, said: 鈥淢emory problems are common as we get older. In clinic I see how uncertainty about whether these might be the first signs of dementia can cause a lot of worry for people and their families, as well as being frustrating for doctors who would much prefer to give definitive answers. 探花直播fact that we might be able to reduce this uncertainty with information we already have is exciting and is likely to become even more important as new treatments emerge.鈥

Professor Kourtzi said: 鈥淎I models are only as good as the data they are trained on. To make sure ours has the potential to be adopted in a healthcare setting, we trained and tested it on routinely-collected data not just from research cohorts, but from patients in actual memory clinics. This shows it will be generalisable to a real-world setting.鈥

探花直播team now hope to extend their model to other forms of dementia, such as vascular dementia and frontotemporal dementia, and using different types of data, such as markers from blood tests.

Professor Kourtzi added: 鈥淚f we鈥檙e going to tackle the growing health challenge presented by dementia, we will need better tools for identifying and intervening at the earliest possible stage. Our vision is to scale up our AI tool to help clinicians assign the right person at the right time to the right diagnostic and treatment pathway. Our tool can help match the right patients to clinical trials, accelerating new drug discovery for disease modifying treatments.鈥

This work was in collaboration with a cross-disciplinary team including Professor Peter Tino at the 探花直播 of Birmingham and Professor Christopher Chen at the National 探花直播 of Singapore. It听was funded by Wellcome, the Royal Society, Alzheimer鈥檚 Research UK, the Alzheimer鈥檚 Drug Discovery Foundation Diagnostics Accelerator, the Alan Turing Institute, and the National Institute for Health and Care Research Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre.

Reference
Lee, LY & Vaghari, D et al. eClinMed; 12 July 2024; DOI: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2024.102725



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