Underutilization Of Brain Amyloid Scans Drives Cost & Hurts Alzheimer's Care
by Alzheimer's Association:
- A survey of individuals with cognitive impairment and their caregivers found that more than 80 percent were receptive to undergoing a PET imaging study if it was recommended by their doctor, and clinicians would base decisions about future patient care on brain PET scan findings. Many study participants were frustrated by the lack of availability of brain amyloid PET scans in clinical practice.
- An analysis of Medicare claims data found that approximately 60 percent of dementia cases are missed in clinical practice, particularly cases of early dementia.
"A negative brain PET scan indicating sparse to no amyloid plaques rules out Alzheimer's disease as the cause of dementia symptoms. This makes it a valuable tool to clarify an uncertain or difficult diagnosis," said James A. Hendrix, PhD, Alzheimer's Association Director of Global Science Initiatives. "Misdiagnosis is costly to health systems, and expensive and distressing to persons with dementia and their families.""Beyond the data reported at AAIC 2017, the IDEAS Study will provide further evidence to demonstrate the utility of amyloid PET imaging in a clinical setting," said Hendrix. "A swift and accurate diagnosis has a huge impact on access to Alzheimer's treatments, eligibility for research trials, plus much-needed support and information services." The IDEAS Study is led by the Alzheimer's Association and managed by the American College of Radiology and American College of Radiology Imaging Network.Utilization of PET Scanning Greatly Enhanced Diagnosis of Alzheimer's DiseaseIdentification of amyloid-β in clinical practice has relied largely on CSF testing and the administration of cognitive and psychiatric tests that are not specific to Alzheimer's disease. The emergence of PET imaging has been instrumental in advancing Alzheimer's research, but despite the high rate of misdiagnosis in this disease, the prevailing wisdom has been that PET imaging does not provide sufficient additional diagnostic accuracy to justify its cost. Two small studies and a meta-analysis presented at AAIC are challenging that view.In an ongoing study of individuals with cognitive complaints performed at Oslo University Hospital by Nenad Bogdanovic, MD, PhD, of the University of Oslo in Norway, amyloid PET imaging was found to be a key contributor to either diagnosing or excluding a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease in all 50 (100 percent) of participants. In contrast, CSF amyloid testing allowed for diagnosis or exclusion in 44 of 50 individuals (88 percent) using a higher detection cutoff and in only 21 individuals (42 percent) using traditional cutoffs.As part of a 135-person study, doctoral student Antoine Leuzy, MSc, of Karolinska Institute in Stockholm and colleagues presented PET imaging results for 61 individuals diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment (n=38), Alzheimer's disease (n=13), other types of dementia (n=8) or severe cognitive impairment (n=2). PET imaging studies led to a change in diagnosis in 68 percent of these participants. Agreement between CSF testing and PET imaging was only 53–57 percent, depending on the approach used to read the PET scan. Where results disagreed, 75–77 percent of individuals were amyloid-β positive on PET scanning. Results from these small studies highlight not only the diagnostic value of PET but also the potential for misdiagnosis using traditional assessments.Enrico Fantoni, PhD, of GE Healthcare in Amersham, UK, is performing an ongoing meta-analysis of four clinical trials conducted between 2000 and 2017 to evaluate the value of amyloid PET (aPET) in a large population of individuals with cognitive impairment. A preliminary evaluation of four studies with more than 1,100 clinical cases revealed that the use of aPET led to a change in diagnosis in over 20 percent of people independent of PET scan outcome.
- In those individuals with a prescan Alzheimer's diagnosis and a positive aPET scan, the diagnosis was subsequently confirmed in 99 percent. Conversely, an Alzheimer's diagnosis was ruled out in the majority of cases with a negative aPET scan (similarly, 99% of cases).
- If the prescan diagnosis was non-Alzheimer's, however, a positive aPET scan led to reassessment as Alzheimer's in 60 percent of cases.
- If the prescan diagnosis was Alzheimer's, a negative aPET scan led to exclusion of Alzheimer's in 54 percent of cases.
Thus, aPET was valuable for excluding and confirming diagnoses of Alzheimer's disease.Limited Access Leads to Underutilization of PET ScanningWhile research supports the value of PET scans for clarifying a diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease, Liana Apostolova, MD, of Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis and colleagues presented a study at AAIC 2017 that indicates that limited access to PET imaging is proving frustrating to individuals and their caregivers, and it leads to continued frequent misdiagnoses of people who would benefit from early intervention.The team surveyed 510 participants and caregivers (predominantly in the U.S.) to gauge their attitudes about PET imaging as a part of patient care. Between 85 percent and 91 percent of respondents indicated they were dissatisfied with the availability of PET scans, supported additional research on PET imaging and were willing to undergo PET scans if they were recommended by their physician.Medicare Claims Frequently Misidentify DementiaCarolyn Zhu, PhD, of Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York and colleagues analyzed data from 2,144 participants in the Washington Heights-Inwood Columbia Aging Project and found that Medicare claims frequently misidentified dementia cases. The sample included 1,689 individuals not diagnosed with dementia and 455 with a clinical diagnosis of dementia based on a rigorous clinical assessment performed at study enrollment. Medicare claims prior to study enrollment allowed for successful identification of 1808 subjects (85 percent), suggesting moderate agreement between claims data and subsequent clinical diagnoses. However, 281 subjects (62 percent) diagnosed with dementia at study enrollment were not identified as such based on prior treatment reported in Medicare claims. These people were younger and had better general health and cognitive function than those identified as having dementia based on Medicare claims.Source: http://prn.to/2vtND3e