Realistic split-image illustration showing obesity-linked faster rise in Alzheimer’s blood biomarkers versus normal weight, highlighting blood tests detecting changes earlier than brain scans.
Realistic split-image illustration showing obesity-linked faster rise in Alzheimer’s blood biomarkers versus normal weight, highlighting blood tests detecting changes earlier than brain scans.
AIによって生成された画像

Obesity linked to faster rise in Alzheimer’s blood biomarkers, study finds

AIによって生成された画像
事実確認済み

New research finds that blood biomarkers associated with Alzheimer’s disease increase significantly faster in people with obesity than in those without. Drawing on five years of data from 407 volunteers, the study suggests that blood tests can detect obesity‑related changes earlier than brain scans, underscoring obesity as a major modifiable risk factor for Alzheimer’s.

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have conducted what they describe as the first study specifically evaluating how obesity affects Alzheimer’s disease blood biomarkers, or BBMs. The work, presented at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) and detailed in materials from RSNA and ScienceDaily, analyzed long‑term data from participants in the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative.

Over roughly five years, the team drew on data from 407 volunteers, including amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) scans to measure beta‑amyloid plaque buildup in the brain and plasma samples that were tested for several Alzheimer’s‑related BBMs. According to the RSNA release and related coverage, these biomarkers included phosphorylated tau 217 (pTau217), neurofilament light chain (NfL) and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). Six leading commercial assays were used to analyze the blood samples.

At the start of the study, higher body mass index (BMI) was associated with lower levels of several blood biomarkers and a lower overall amyloid burden on PET. Lead author Soheil Mohammadi, M.D., M.P.H., a postdoctoral research associate at the Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, said in RSNA materials, “We believe the reduced BBMs in obese individuals was due to dilution from the higher blood volume.” He added that relying only on baseline measurements could give the misleading impression that people with obesity have less Alzheimer’s pathology.

Longitudinal analyses told a different story. Compared with participants without obesity, those with obesity showed substantially faster increases in multiple markers of Alzheimer’s‑related pathology over time. According to the RSNA and ScienceDaily summaries, people with obesity experienced a 29% to 95% faster increase in plasma pTau217 ratio levels, a 24% faster rise in plasma NfL and a 3.7% faster rate of amyloid accumulation on PET scans. Both blood biomarkers and brain imaging indicated greater buildup of Alzheimer’s‑related pathology in participants with obesity over the follow‑up period.

Senior author Cyrus Raji, M.D., Ph.D., a principal investigator in the Neuroimaging Labs Research Center at Washington University, emphasized that the blood tests were more sensitive than PET scans for picking up the influence of obesity on these changes. “The fact that we can track the predictive influence of obesity on rising blood biomarkers more sensitively than PET is what astonished me in this study,” he said in statements released by RSNA and reported in multiple news accounts.

The findings add to evidence that obesity is an important modifiable risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease. Mohammadi noted that, according to the 2024 report of the Lancet Commission, 14 modifiable risk factors together account for approximately 45%—close to half—of the overall risk for Alzheimer’s. “If we can reduce any of those risk factors, we can significantly reduce Alzheimer’s cases or lengthen the amount of time until the onset of the disease,” he said.

Looking ahead, Raji said he expects repeated measurements of blood biomarkers, combined with brain imaging, to become an increasingly common way to monitor how treatments affect brain health, including anti‑amyloid drugs and therapies targeting obesity. He suggested that having sensitive blood tests and MRI and PET imaging could allow clinicians and researchers to track both molecular pathology and structural brain changes over time. RSNA materials list Farzaneh Rahmani, M.D., M.P.H., Mahsa Dolatshahi, M.D., M.P.H., and Suzanne E. Schindler, M.D., Ph.D., as co‑authors on the study.

Note: While the biomarker and imaging findings are supported by conference materials, press releases and a related peer‑reviewed article on obesity and Alzheimer’s blood biomarkers, the work presented at RSNA has not yet been fully vetted through peer review in its conference form and should be interpreted accordingly.

人々が言っていること

Initial reactions on X to the study are limited but include shares from research labs, Alzheimer's advocates, and news outlets emphasizing that obesity accelerates the rise of Alzheimer’s blood biomarkers up to 95% faster than in non-obese individuals, detectable earlier via blood tests than brain scans, reinforcing obesity as a major modifiable risk factor.

関連記事

Illustration of a doctor reviewing Alzheimer’s blood test results influenced by kidney problems, for news article on study findings.
AIによって生成された画像

腎臓の問題がアルツハイマーの血液検査結果を歪める可能性、研究が示唆

AIによるレポート AIによって生成された画像 事実確認済み

*Neurology*に掲載された大規模研究では、腎機能障害が血液中のアルツハイマー病バイオマーカーレベルを高くするが、全体的な認知症リスクは増加しないことが判明。しかし、すでにバイオマーカーレベルが高い人々では、腎臓の健康状態が悪いと認知症症状の出現が早まる可能性があり、アルツハイマーの血液検査解釈に腎機能を考慮する必要性を強調している。

新たな遺伝子研究によると、肥満と高血圧は単にリスクを高めるだけでなく、認知症に直接寄与することが示された。デンマークと英国の研究者が先進的な手法を用いてこの因果関係を確立し、体重と血圧の管理を通じた予防を強調した。結果は、早期介入が血管関連認知症を回避できる可能性を示唆している。

AIによるレポート

セントルイスのワシントン大学医学部科学者らが、p-tau217タンパク質のレベルを用いた血液検査を開発し、アルツハイマー症状がいつ始まるかを推定する。このモデルは約3〜4年以内の発症を予測し、臨床試験や早期介入に役立つ可能性がある。この進展は、進行中の研究の603人の高齢者のデータに基づく。

Prof KVS Hari, director of the Centre for Brain Research at IISc Bengaluru, emphasized digital biomarkers for early detection and prevention of dementia. He noted that India's rapidly aging population makes dementia a major public health challenge. The centre focuses on data collection and AI to understand disease progression in the Indian context.

AIによるレポート

約200万人の高齢者を対象とした大規模研究で、脳血管にアミロイドタンパク質が蓄積する脳アミロイド血管症が認知症のリスクを急激に高めることが判明した。診断後5年以内に、この疾患を持つ人は脳卒中歴がなくても、持たない人に比べて認知症を発症する可能性が4倍高かった。メディケアの記録から得られたこの知見は、影響を受けた人々に対する早期認知スクリーニングの必要性を強調している。

研究者らは、アルツハイマー病のアフリカ系アメリカ人の脳組織でADAMTS2遺伝子が有意に活発であることを特定し、人種グループ間で共有される可能性のある生物学的経路を示した。この発見は、200人以上のアフリカ系アメリカ人の脳サンプルを使用した同種最大規模の研究から得られた。この遺伝子の顕著さは、白人個体の別分析でも現れ、治療への広範な示唆を提案している。

AIによるレポート 事実確認済み

Rice大学の科学者らは、動物モデルにおけるアルツハイマー病脳の最初の完全なラベルフリー分子アトラスを作成したと述べ、ハイパースペクトルRamanイメージングと機械学習を組み合わせ、脳領域全体で不均一に現れる化学変化をマッピングし、アミロイドプラークを超えて広がるものを明らかにした。

 

 

 

このウェブサイトはCookieを使用します

サイトを改善するための分析にCookieを使用します。詳細については、プライバシーポリシーをお読みください。
拒否