Landmark Study Investigating Novel Alzheimer’s Biomarkers Advances to Data Analysis Stage

Bio-Hermes won’t just change Alzheimer’s research and diagnostics. It has the potential to save and change lives.

WASHINGTON, DC, June 14, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Up to 50 percent of people in the U.S. with Alzheimer’s receive an imprecise or inaccurate diagnosis of their cognitive condition. The tools typically used to detect the disease, like a PET scan, can cost thousands of dollars and are generally only available in places with large medical institutions. And African Americans are 35 percent less likely to be diagnosed than their White counterparts.

That is unacceptable.

The Bio-Hermes digital and blood-based biomarker study for Alzheimer’s disease will change how Alzheimer’s disease is assessed and how it is diagnosed and how people may learn about their risk for the disease. Bio-Hermes won’t just change Alzheimer’s research and diagnostics. It has the potential to save and change lives. 

That’s why today, Global Alzheimer’s Platform Foundation® (GAP) President John Dwyer announced the next stage in its Bio-Hermes digital and blood-based biomarker study for Alzheimer’s disease. The study closed in November 2022 with an unprecedented 24 percent level of participation from traditionally underrepresented communities.

“Millions of Americans seek an assessment and diagnosis of their cognitive condition out of fear that they may have dementia. So many of these visits are imprecise or just wrong. Now that the FDA is approving disease-modifying therapies for Alzheimer’s, the demand for testing will greatly increase. The biomarkers being analyzed in Bio-Hermes will catalyze better clinical diagnosis and improve clinical trials. People living with Alzheimer’s disease know all too well the disease doesn’t wait,” Dwyer said. “That’s why we won’t wait, and that drives the urgency behind our work on the Bio-Hermes study. Health systems and patients deserve a better process.”

GAP recently completed its first database lock of the largest collection of digital cognitive tests and blood-based biomarkers for the analysis of Alzheimer’s disease. Now a consortium of study partners including Eli Lilly, Abbvie, Biogen and Merck — as well as Gates Ventures, the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Fund and nearly two dozen other biotech companies are analyzing the data and preparing to publish the results.

Bio-Hermes drew biomarker data from people who are cognitively healthy, those with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), and those with mild Alzheimer’s disease (mAD).

It also includes a full genomic, proteomic, and PET image profile of each participant. Given the extraordinary participant diversity in the trial population, the Bio-Hermes data set provides an unprecedented opportunity to identify the best solutions for diagnosing Alzheimer’s for everyone, especially the African American and Hispanic/Latino communities that are disproportionally at risk for the disease.