Background: Phosphorylation of tau protein at threonine 231 (using full-length tau, 441 amino acids, for the numbering scheme) (p-tau(231)) occurs specifically in postmortem brain tissue of patients with Alzheimer disease (AD) and can be sensitively detected in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).
Objectives: To determine to what extent CSF levels of p-tau(231) distinguish patients with AD from control subjects and from patients with other dementias, and to investigate whether p-tau(231) levels are a better diagnostic marker than levels of total tau protein (t-tau) in CSF.
Design and setting: Cross-sectional, multicenter, memory clinic-based studies.
Participants: One hundred ninety-two patients with a clinical diagnosis of AD, frontotemporal dementia (FTD), vascular dementia, Lewy body dementia, or other neurological disorder and healthy controls.
Main outcome measures: Levels of CSF tau proteins as measured with enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays.
Results: Mean CSF levels of p-tau(231) were significantly elevated in the AD group compared with all other groups. Levels of p-tau(231) did not correlate with dementia severity in AD, and discriminated with a sensitivity of 90.2% and a specificity of 80.0% between AD and all non-AD disorders. Moreover, p-tau(231) levels improved diagnostic accuracy compared with t-tau levels when patients with AD were compared with healthy controls (P =.03) and demented subjects (P<.001), particularly those with FTD (P<.001), but not those with vascular and Lewy body dementias. Sensitivity levels between AD and FTD were raised by p-tau(231) compared with t-tau levels from 57.7% to 90.2% at a specificity level of 92.3% for both markers.
Conclusion: Increased levels of CSF p-tau(231) may be a useful, clinically applicable biological marker for the differential diagnosis of AD, particularly for distinguishing AD from FTD.