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Technology To Detect Alzheimer's Takes SXSW Prize

An anonymous reader writes "Being able to diagnose people with Alzheimer's disease years before debilitating symptoms appear is now a step closer to reality. Researchers behind Neurotrack, the technology startup that took the first place health prize at this year's South by Southwest (SXSW) startup accelerator in Austin. The company says their new technology can diagnose Alzheimer's disease up to six years before symptoms appear with 100% accuracy."

4 of 81 comments (clear)

  1. Re:What's the point? by scottrocket · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A good screening test is one that identifies a treatable disease.

    Or six years extra for people to try experimental treatments before symptoms kick in. Or six extra years to decide when or how to gracefully leave this world, with dignity.

  2. Re:What's the point? by hsmith · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Now they can figure out who has it, before it is too late. I heard it described as "this test is like before mammograms, when a woman found out she has breast cancer It was always stage 4 at that point". Now, with a test, researchers have a better window to fight it.

  3. Sigh. by ledow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Claim of 100% accuracy.
    A Twitter full of "launch" and "pitch" announcements and not much else.
    A website that is nothing more than a placeholder.

    Yeah, they're going straight into the history books, they are.

    You want me to believe you, publish, and let people rip it apart. If the public-facing part of your whole organisation is talking of nothing more than startup awards and pitches, I don't see how you can be doing proper research, or how you can be selling it to medical establishments. And without bothering to provide evidence of either, I can only assume it's snake-oil.

  4. Sensitivity vs. specificity by janek78 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It is very easy to make a test that detects 100% of patients who will eventually get a disease. Just make it always say "positive" and you're done. The hard thing is balancing the ability to detect a disease and avoid false negatives (sensitivity) with the ability to detect absence of disease and avoid false positives (specificity). Related to this are the positive predictive negative predictive values. Since Alzheimer's is very difficult to diagnose clinically and the only definitive proof is a biopsy/autopsy, I very much doubt a screening test would exist with a 100 % sensitivity and/or specificity.