
This week on The Genetics Podcast, Patrick is joined by Dr. Suzanne Schindler, Associate Professor of Neurology at Washington University in St. Louis. They discuss how blood-based biomarkers like p-tau217 are transforming our ability to detect and stage Alzheimer’s disease, how “clock models” can estimate when symptoms may begin, and how combining biomarkers with clinical phenotyping could improve trial design, prognosis, and patient care.Show Notes0:00 Intro to The Genetics Podcast00:59 Welcome to Suzanne01:35 Neurobiology of Alzheimer’s disease and how it differs from dementia06:22 Presymptomatic changes to phosphorylated tau (p-tau) in the brain07:36 The role of the APOE gene in Alzheimer’s09:07 Differences in neuropathology in women vs men with Alzheimer’s10:19 Rare cases where amyloid and tau pathology do not align in Alzheimer’s12:37 Using plasma p-tau217 trajectories to estimate when Alzheimer’s symptoms may begin17:30 Using p-tau217 to select clinical trial participants and predict progression timelines20:59 Overview of therapeutic strategies in Alzheimer’s disease24:24 Why APOE effects may not appear in p-tau217 measurements26:30 Combining biomarkers and clinical phenotyping to understand disease progression in Alzheimer’s30:08 Early-onset vs late-onset Alzheimer’s and differences in clinical presentation31:45 Expanding beyond p-tau217 to proteomics and multimodal biomarkers for predicting symptoms33:52 MTBR-tau243 as a more specific marker of tau pathology and Alzheimer’s symptoms37:31 Expanding biomarkers beyond Alzheimer’s and bringing blood tests into clinical practice38:49 Closing remarksFind out more:Phosphorylated tau217 studyMTBR-tau243 study
Podzilla Summary coming soon
Sign up to get notified when the full AI-powered summary is ready.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.

EP 242: Connecting dementia research, policy, and patient communities with Angela Bradshaw of Alzheimer Europe [Re-Run]

EP 241: The hard-won lessons behind Encoded Therapeutics’ Dravet syndrome gene therapy with Salvador Rico [Re-run]

EP 240: Hijacking DNA repair machinery to treat Huntington’s disease with Vincent Dion of the UKDRI

EP 239: What long-read sequencing reveals about Alzheimer’s and ALS with Paul Valdmanis of the University of Washington
Free AI-powered recaps of The Genetics Podcast and your other favorite podcasts, delivered to your inbox.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.