Quest Diagnostics Launches New AD-Detect™ Blood Test to Aid in Confirming Alzheimer's Disease
In an oral presentation at the 2025 AAN Annual Meeting, Quest scientists presented data suggesting the test can accurately assess Alzheimer's disease pathology with greater than 90% sensitivity and specificity
The laboratory-developed test, named AD-Detect™ Abeta 42/40 and p-tau217 Evaluation, combines results of blood levels of amyloid beta (AB) 42/40 determined by the company's proprietary tandem mass spectrometry techniques with blood levels of p-tau217 determined by an in vitro immunoassay test. The test results are then used to produce the AD-Detect Likelihood Score™, a composite interpretation created through a proprietary algorithm validated utilizing a well-characterized cohort from the 1Florida Alzheimer's
The new Quest test panel builds on prior AD-Detect tests that individually assess AB 42/40 and p-tau217, as well as p-tau181 and the ApoE isoform, a genetic risk marker. Those tests help providers assess risk of AD rather than confirm likelihood of amyloid brain pathology due to AD.
"Quest's AD-Detect suite of advanced diagnostics has grown to include a range of validated blood-based biomarkers, giving providers options for personalizing testing for the individual patient," said
Research demonstrates test's strong alignment with PET
In AD, a protein called amyloid forms plaques in the brain, triggering changes in another protein, tau, and causing it to twist into tangles. These plaques and tangles disrupt brain cell function while also causing abnormal levels of both proteins to circulate in the blood stream.
In an oral presentation given this week at the
The researchers also categorized 4,326 "real-world specimens" tested by Quest for AB 42/40, p-tau217 and ApoE4 values. The model and cut points categorized these specimens as having 42% high likelihood, 51% low likelihood, and 7% indeterminant likelihood for PET positivity.
"As the population ages and new therapies emerge, our new AD-Detect test will help fill the need for scalable, high-volume solutions that broaden access to robust and affordable evaluation of AD," said study co-author
While amyloid PET imaging and cerebral spinal fluid testing are established methods for aiding the diagnosis of AD, they are significantly more expensive, invasive and specialist-dependent than blood-based tests.
The study's strengths included significant ethnic diversity in the population (over 50% Hispanic) while limitations included using a predictive model that did not evaluate performance of the biomarkers in the context of non-AD causes of dementia. The study adds to a growing body of research on the Quest AD-Detect test portfolio, including studies published in the
Broadening access to quality AD assessment
With the exception of
Nearly 7 million Americans have Alzheimer's, the most prevalent dementia, a number projected to reach 14 million by 2060. Approximately 12-18% of adults over the age of sixty are living with mild cognitive impairment, a potential sign of AD. Seventy-seven percent of physicians say new therapies will transform Alzheimer's into a chronic, manageable disease, and 94% of physicians say blood tests would be more cost effective for the healthcare system compared to more invasive methods of detection (e.g., lumbar puncture, imaging studies) according to a special report from Quest.
Quest is committed to developing innovative advanced diagnostics to aid in evaluating AD and other brain diseases. For more information, visit www.QuestForTheCure.com.
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