This curriculum has been developed to educate both experienced clinicians and trainees on the rapidly evolving landscape of Alzheimer’s Disease diagnosis and treatment.
Learning Objectives
Identify common neurodegenerative conditions causing dementia and their pathologic features.
Describe the Alzheimer’s Association criteria for diagnosing and staging AD and compare it with an International Working Group framework.
Compare diagnostic frameworks: pathologic disease vs. clinical syndrome.
Outline an algorithm for cognitive evaluation and screening.
Describe common MRI and metabolic PET findings in AD and discuss diagnostic limitations.
Identify appropriate clinical scenarios for amyloid and tau PET testing.
Describe the strengths and limitations of AD fluid biomarkers compared to PET biomarkers and recognize factors that impact fluid biomarker interpretation.
Identify perspectives on how blood-based biomarkers could be used to detect or rule out AD pathology.
Explain the mechanism of action of anti-amyloid therapy and identify patients most likely to benefit from treatment.
Recognize the risk factors for amyloid related-imaging abnormalities (ARIA).
Review the two main clinical trials of lecanemab and donanemab and describe appropriate use recommendations and guidance for clinicians.
Apply shared decision-making principles in discussing anti-amyloid treatments and best practice for communicating risks, benefits, and evidence.
Recognize racial and ethnic disparities in dementia care and understand the challenges of applying clinical trial results to diverse populations.
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