ALZpath – which develops diagnostic tools for Alzheimer's disease and related dementias – has announced a licensing agreement with Siemens Healthineers for use of its proprietary pTau217 antibody in the development of a pTau217 assay.
Siemens Healthineers will utilise ALZpath's high-performing, proprietary pTau217 antibody in its growing test menu for its Atellica analyzers (pictured) to enable in vitro diagnostic (IVD) testing for Alzheimer's disease.
Blood-based neurodegenerative disease diagnostics, including those for Alzheimer's, are a transformative advancement. The ALZpath pTau217 antibody has shown exceptional performance across a range of platforms to help identify patients with Alzheimer's disease through a simple blood draw. It enables sensitive, accurate detection of Alzheimer's disease pathology with performance comparable to PET imaging and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) testing, and, via in vitro diagnostic tests, it may be deployed in a wide range of clinical settings. ALZpath's pTau217 antibody is supported by robust clinical evidence, including more than 90 peer-reviewed studies.
"This agreement supports ALZpath's mission to democratise access to early and accurate Alzheimer's disease testing," said Mike Banville, CEO of ALZpath. "By enabling Siemens Healthineers to integrate our pTau217 antibody across its expansive immunoassay testing footprint, we are expanding global access to timely diagnosis as new therapies become available to patients."
As disease-modifying therapies reach broader use, scalable and accessible diagnostic tools are helping identify patients earlier in their disease. Siemens Healthineers offers integrated immunoassay and clinical chemistry analysers used in clinical laboratories of all sizes across the world to test patient samples. The unique engineering of the Atellica analysers maximizes assay precision while also providing industry-leading throughput to materialize test results faster for patients.
"Collaboration drives innovation and advances patient care. The sooner we detect degenerative diseases, the more time clinicians, patients, and families have to prepare—and the more impactful disease modifying therapies can be," said Dirk Heckel, Chief Technology Officer and Head of Research, Development and Innovation for Diagnostics at Siemens Healthineers.