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AD is a chronic, nonlinearly progressive, multifactorial neurodegenerative disease that affects multiple domains of an affected individual’s life during advanced stage of progression, such as cognition, behavior, functional abilities and social interactions. AD is the most common cause of dementia, accounting for around 60–80% of cases1. In 2019, over 50 million people were living with dementia worldwide, and the number is expected to rise to 152 million by 2050, largely driven by the projected increases in low-income and middle-income countries2. With population growth and aging, AD is becoming one of the most burdensome and costly diseases facing global society today3.

Historically, the diagnosis and treatment of AD focused on clinical symptoms. In the past three decades, in vivo biomarker studies identified core pathophysiological alterations—including amyloid and tau—that characterize and underly AD across its decades-long preclinical and prodromal phases. Such evidence has transformed the disease concept from clinically defined to biologically defined (Box 1)4,5. This transformation opened the gate to biomarker-guided, molecular pathway-based targeted therapies6,7. To date, a new wave of pharmacological compounds targeting AD pathophysiological hallmarks have reached late-stage clinical development with one agent recently approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for clinical use in treating AD8,9,10,11,12.

The possibility of detecting AD in its preclinical or prodromal stages and the opportunity of therapeutic intervention to alter clinical progression call for a next-generation global framework of clinical care pathways for individuals with AD. Under this framework, new clinical pathways—which may differ by country and clinical context—must enable timely, accurate and effective detection, diagnosis and treatment of AD at the early stages of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) due to AD and mild AD dementia (collectively defined as early AD hereafter). To this end, in vivo assessment of AD biological continuum (that is, through fluid testing and imaging biomarkers) and ecologically valid/low-threshold assessment of clinical symptomatology through digital health technologies will inevitably play a critical and guiding role in early detection, diagnosis, prognosis and therapeutic decision-making.

It is important to highlight the substantial inequalities in AD and dementia care currently. For example, in the United States, older Black and Hispanic individuals are disproportionally more likely to be affected by AD and other primary dementia disorders, and are more likely to have missed diagnoses, than older white individuals13. Various social determinants of health, such as socioeconomic status and educational attainment, also influence cognition and risk of AD14. Globally, more than two-thirds of people with dementia live in low-income and middle-income countries; however, the condition is often underdiagnosed and undertreated due to various factors such as lack of awareness, stigma and limited health care resources15. One key priority is to achieve access and equity of care for the growing number of people living with the disease16.

In this Perspective, we describe a blueprint for transitioning from the current clinical symptom-focused and inherently late-stage management of AD to a biomarker-guided and digitally facilitated clinical care pathway that focuses on detection and intervention at early stages of the disease. We will address critical hurdles to the practical implementation of such a paradigm shift. We emphasize that patient and care partner perspectives must be considered and become central when developing and implementing a new clinical care pathway for AD.

Defining the next-generation clinical care pathway for Alzheimer’s disease

At present in a routine clinical setting, AD is often detected at the mild-to-moderate dementia stage. Diagnosis is usually based on clinical symptoms without biomarker confirmation, and pharmacological treatment options are largely limited to those addressing the symptoms of AD dementia, such as cholinergic and glutamatergic modulators approved two decades ago to mitigate cognitive and behavioral/psychological symptoms. Non-pharmacological treatments have shown promise in preventing cognitive decline; for example, the Finnish Geriatric Intervention Study to Prevent Cognitive Impairment and Disability (FINGER) demonstrated that a multidomain intervention aimed at reducing lifestyle-related and vascular-related risk factors was effective at preventing cognitive decline among older individuals at risk for dementia17. This landmark study has led to the development of the World-Wide FINGERS network aiming to adapt, test and optimize the FINGER model for risk reduction and prevention of cognitive decline across different countries and settings18.

Emerging treatments targeting AD-associated pathophysiology are directed at earlier stages of the disease and aim at maintaining cognition and function11. Early intervention may allow the affected individual to function at the highest level longer. The availability of such emerging treatments necessitates the identification of individuals with early-stage AD in routine clinical settings beyond academic and/or trial centers. Early detection of AD could empower affected individuals and their care partners to make decisions about future treatment and care proactively, and to anticipate and adapt to the cognitive and behavioral changes associated with disease progression19.

However, multiple hurdles to early detection and early intervention exist in routine clinical practice. Affected persons and family may not understand the early signs of AD and how they differ from normal aging, and may avoid seeking medical attention due to the stigma associated with dementia diagnosis20. Currently across the globe, the rate of undetected dementia is as high as ~60%21,22, with diagnosis of MCI being a rare exception rather than the norm. It is crucial for clinicians as well as patients and families to recognize the importance of early detection and diagnosis, and not overlook the early symptoms of AD or mislabel these as normal aging23. With these barriers in mind, we describe the next-generation clinical care pathway for AD and its implementation in daily clinical practice requiring innovation in health care system infrastructures and workflow and bridging of the general public into a participatory framework of medicine.

Summary of key steps in future clinical care pathway for Alzheimer’s disease

First-line diagnostic workup: primary care

The first step of the next-generation clinical care pathway for AD (Fig. 1) involves a potentially affected individual or family members noticing subtle changes in cognition and/or behavior and proactively seeking medical and/or psychological consultation in a primary care setting. It may also be possible to detect changes during a routine visit.

Fig. 1: The next-generation clinical care pathway for Alzheimer’s disease.
figure 1

a, An overarching illustration. The next-generation clinical care pathway begins with healthy aging and participation in preventive lifestyle measures to slow or prevent accumulation of AD pathophysiology, with the goal of extending healthspan across populations. Symptom detection, triggered by concerned individuals or family members, or detected during a routine wellness visit, may involve cognitive testing and, in the future, blood-based biomarkers and digitally based assessments. This will be accompanied by clinical assessments involving standard laboratory tests and physical examination. Any recorded cognitive impairment will be confirmed with standardized biomarker tests. Individuals with confirmed disease will proceed to treatment initiation with relevant AD therapy followed by long-term monitoring, of which digital technologies and blood-based biomarkers will play a key role in the future. b, Digital health technologies in future AD clinical care and the path toward a precision monitoring and detection platform. A precision monitoring and detection platform will require a transformation from the traditional data collection methods to the inclusion of digital technologies. This will include active engagement technologies that require individual interaction and engagement to passive engagement technologies that collect data in the background while the individuals keep to their daily routine. AI, artificial intelligence; EEG, electroencephalogram; NP, neuropsychiatric; PSG, polysomnography.

The first-line medical assessment consists of recording family and medical history to assess for risk factors for AD (family history for neurodegenerative diseases, diabetes, history of traumatic brain injury, and so on) or other causes of reversible/irreversible cognitive impairment (for example, cerebrovascular and cardio-cerebrovascular diseases, psychiatric disorders, metabolic/endocrinological diseases with neurological manifestations, cancer and its treatments, and potentially, neurological consequences of coronavirus disease 2019)5,24,25,26. Assessments may be collected digitally to facilitate both patient experience and clinician workflow.

Physical examination (general and neurological) can identify signs of central and autonomous nervous system impairment that may suggest non-AD diagnoses (for example, early psychosis, bradykinesia, postural reflexes, involuntary movements, severe orthostatic hypotension and others)5,24. Digital assessments of bradykinesia, tremor and blood pressure may augment clinical evaluations. First-line medical evaluation would continue to include laboratory tests to identify other potential causes of reversible/irreversible cognitive impairment, such as routine blood tests for vitamin B12 deficiency and hypothyroidism, electrolyte imbalance, severe anemia, hepatic and renal diseases, and, when appropriate, screening tests for infectious diseases such as syphilis and human immunodeficiency virus.

Quick, easy-to-use and validated clinical assessment tools can be used to identify impairment in cognition, function and behavior. Such tools already exist, including the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) or Mini Cognitive Assessment Instrument (Mini-Cog) for assessing cognition, the Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) or Functional Activities Questionnaire (FAQ) for assessing daily function, and the Neuropsychiatric Inventory Questionnaire (NPI-Q) for assessing behavior27. However, primary care physicians (PCPs) often have substantial time constraints and may require training and support to evaluate individuals with such methods. Moreover, many of the standard instruments are impacted by linguistic, cultural, educational and demographic factors, and referral to specialists for more in-depth neuropsychological evaluation may be required for accurate diagnosis in certain situations28. In the future, low-threshold digital assessment tools for measuring cognitive performance will be needed27,29,30. In addition, blood-based biomarkers of AD pathophysiology—currently under clinical validation and/or qualification—may also be used in the primary care setting in the future to better inform referral to AD specialists who would be in charge of the second-line diagnostic workup and therapeutic decision-making29,31,32,33,34.

Second-line diagnostic workup and therapeutic decision-making: Alzheimer’s disease specialist

In the AD specialist setting with a neurologist, geriatrician or geriatric psychiatrist, a more comprehensive clinical evaluation will determine if the clinical presentation is consistent with AD. Specialist assessment is particularly important in complex cases with atypical presentation, early-onset or rapid progression35. Brain computerized tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are recommended to identify structural explanations for cognitive impairment, such as neoplasm, past stroke or hydrocephalus, to name a few36. Atrophy patterns of the brain can provide first signs for the presence of a neurodegenerative disease35.

The second-line diagnostic workup is characterized by in vivo demonstration of AD hallmark pathophysiological changes reflected by the amyloid/tau/neurodegeneration (AT(N)) classification system, that is, proteinopathies involving amyloid-β (Aβ) and tau pathways, axonal damage and neuronal loss (Table 1)5. In the medium to long term, blood-based biomarkers may evolve from triage tools to confirmatory biomarkers comparable to the current standard of amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers. It is important to exclude any amnestic cognitive syndromes without Aβ and tau pathology such as limbic-predominant age-related TDP-43 encephalopathy neuropathological change (LATE-NC)37,38. Currently, this is only possible by excluding AD specific pathology; in the future, positive biomarkers for TDP-43 in the CSF may become available39.

Table 1 ATX(N) biomarkers and their contexts of use in Alzheimer’s disease5,8,9,136

In situations where AD is excluded as the cause for cognitive impairment, the path for the individual would be redirected toward non-AD conditions. A diagnosis of AD would require discussions between the clinician and the individual/family for prognosis. The most critical prognostic outcomes to individuals and their care partners are related to cognitive decline, dependency and physical health40.

Therapeutic interventions will consist of agents targeting AD-associated pathophysiology, although at present patients must be aware that these treatments are unlikely to stop or reverse cognitive decline. These therapies will likely be given in combination with existing symptomatic treatments (cholinesterase inhibitors or memantine), and likely guided by the profile of biomarker and behavioral or functional changes11,41. Treatment continuation, cessation or dose adjustment will be determined based on clinical and biological factors42,43.

In the future when treatments for preclinical (presymptomatic) stages of AD become available, identifying such populations will become critical. At such time, a personalized, multidimensional approach to the diagnosis of preclinical AD should be considered for the best chance of diagnosis and progression prediction. This will likely include identifying genetic risk factors associated with AD and abnormalities in fluid and neuroimaging AD biomarkers; in particular, periodic screening with blood-based biomarkers of AD pathophysiology (Aβ42/40 and phosphorylated tau (p-tau) species) in appropriate populations should be considered44. Such a complex approach has several outstanding issues such as diagnostic accuracy, cost of diagnosis and treatment relative to benefit) yet without consensus on when a preclinical diagnosis of AD is indicated and how it should be performed22,45,46. Consensus process in the future should involve clinical and biomarker experts, but also patient advocacy groups and representatives of regulatory agencies and payers. In addition to pharmacological interventions, multidomain lifestyle interventions could prove beneficial over the long term in such populations, which may include modifications of diet, exercise, sleep and social and cognitive stimulation47.

Communication with patients and their care partners

Patient and care partner perspectives must be considered when developing and implementing the next-generation clinical care pathway for AD48,49,50,51. Their collective involvement is essential to provide insight into possible gaps in existing health services48,49,50. Qualitative studies have revealed the need for: (1) early diagnosis through a well-organized process, (2) a notably shorter pathway to accessing support services for their current needs and care goals, (3) easily accessible, adequate and clear information about cognitive testing, medications, disease progression, finances and behavior, (4) effective disease management by highly knowledgeable and experienced clinicians, and (5) good communication skills of clinicians48. Individuals at risk for AD or with early AD and their families will need substantial health literacy to understand and apply the increasingly complex and nuanced information such as risk prediction, early detection and prognosis for decision-making on health-related issues. Overall health literacy can vary substantially, and effective and clear communication from clinicians with empathy and sensitivity to individual needs and preferences is critical52. In the context of diagnosis and therapeutic workup, among a number of informative topics, clinicians must effectively communicate the rationale for biomarker testing, the results and implications for treatment and to set appropriate expectations, as treatments that target AD-associated pathophysiology are likely to slow clinical decline without noticeable improvement in symptoms53,54. Involving the patient and care partner to understand what matters to them regarding health, cognitive, behavioral and functional status as a measure of treatment success and developing a tool for this purpose is equally important55,56. In addition, patient and care partner preference in how they would like to be informed must be taken into consideration.

Use of biomarkers in clinical care of Alzheimer’s disease

The incorporation of biomarkers represents a major innovation in the next-generation clinical care pathway for AD, supporting screening, diagnosis and disease staging as well as predicting the rate of progression, determining prognosis and assisting therapeutic decision-making9. Established Aβ biomarkers such as those measured by PET imaging or CSF analysis should be used to assess the presence of amyloid pathology and is mostly used today in specialized and tertiary care for diagnostic confirmation and therapeutic decision-making. Three radioligands for amyloid PET have been approved by the US FDA and European Medicines Agency (EMA) for amyloid plaque imaging in cognitively impaired individuals being clinically evaluated for AD and other causes of cognitive decline. These include 18F-florbetapir57, 18F-flutemetamol58 and 18F-florbetaben59. Amyloid PET was validated against the gold standard of neuropathology, has undergone extensive standardization and has been widely used in AD clinical trials34. The appropriate use criteria for amyloid PET are available, providing guidance to clinicians on the types of patients and clinical circumstances in which amyloid PET should be used60,61. Interestingly, an applied study showed relevant clinical benefit of amyloid PET imaging even for individuals who did not meet the appropriate use criteria62. The Imaging Dementia-Evidence For Amyloid Scanning (IDEAS) study provided evidence that amyloid PET positively impacts diagnostic accuracy and certainty as well as patient management63. As such, amyloid PET is likely to be the first choice for clinical use in the context of anti-Aβ agents, especially in the United States and Europe. However, the limited availability of PET scanners, radioligand manufacturing centers and nuclear medicine teams, as well as the high cost and lack of reimbursement are all factors that constrain its global use in routine clinical practice34,64.

CSF biomarker analysis for Aβ42 has been developed and standardized using certified reference materials and methods65. The CSF Aβ42/40 ratio is highly concordant with amyloid PET, and evidence suggests that Aβ abnormalities may be detected in CSF earlier than by amyloid PET. Both the FDA and the EMA have encouraged further study of CSF biomarkers in the context of clinical AD diagnostics34,65. The appropriate use criteria for lumbar puncture and CSF testing during the diagnostic workup of AD have been established66, and further recommendations to optimize the safety profile of lumbar puncture are available67. Recommendations and protocols to standardize the pre-analytical aspects of CSF biomarker testing for AD are also established68,69.

Besides Aβ, development of tau biomarkers has also advanced markedly. Various tau PET radioligands could chart the spatial spreading of tau pathophysiology in vivo, which tightly correlates with cognitive and functional outcomes across AD clinical stages34,70. Flortaucipir F18 was recently approved in the United States for imaging tau pathology in individuals with cognitive impairment who are being evaluated for AD, and several other investigational tau tracers are being actively studied34,70. Among several contexts of use of tau biomarkers71,72,73, monitoring downstream biological effects on tau pathways following anti-Aβ treatment and guiding future anti-Aβ and tau combination therapies represent two unique opportunities34.

As PET imaging is expensive and of limited availability, and CSF sampling may be considered invasive, the rapidly advancing blood-based biomarkers for AD are particularly promising, given the broad availability, scalability and cost-effectiveness of blood tests globally (Box 2). Plasma Aβ42/40 shows great promise in accurately reflecting amyloid PET and CSF Aβ42/40 results74,75,76. A mass spectrometry-based plasma Aβ42/40 test achieved an accuracy of 0.81 (area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve) in predicting brain amyloid status, and has recently received Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments certification77. Besides Aβ, plasma p-tau181, p-tau217 and p-tau231 are emerging as accurate, specific and accessible biomarkers for detecting early AD-related pathophysiology78,79,80,81,82,83,84. In the near term, blood-based biomarkers reflecting core AD pathophysiology have the potential to serve as screening and triage tools to identify those who should be tested with more resource-demanding techniques such as PET imaging and/or CSF biomarker analysis. It will be important to define standard diagnostic pathways following a positive blood biomarker test, including the development of an evidence base for predictive accuracy within a primary care setting, provision of access to specialized care, and determination of thresholds of positivity that will guide the use of new treatments targeting AD pathophysiology9,32,85. In the future, blood-based biomarkers may be developed for other contexts of use such as to predict disease risk, track disease progression and monitor treatment response9,32.

Biomarkers reflecting other components of AD-related pathophysiology, such as neuronal injury/neurodegeneration (CSF total tau and neurofilament light chain (NfL), volumetric MRI), synaptic dysfunction (CSF neurogranin, 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-PET and synaptic vesicle glycoprotein 2A (SV2A) PET) and inflammation (CSF chitinase-3-like protein (YKL-40), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and soluble triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (TREM2), translocator protein (TSPO) PET and monoamine oxidase B (MAO-B) PET) are emerging, but are not yet ready for clinical implementation (Table 1)34.

It is worth noting that a sizable portion of individuals with AD exhibit comorbid pathologies such as vascular lesions or intracellular inclusions of TDP-43 (refs. 86,87). There is an urgent need for research to develop imaging and fluid biomarkers for common co-pathologies such as TDP-43, α-synuclein and other misfolded proteins. Further studies are needed to understand how comorbid pathologies contribute to the biological and clinical progression of AD, and how to factor these in during the clinical management of patients. In addition, biomarker data on individuals aged 85 and older (oldest old) are scarce; given that age is the greatest risk factor for late-onset AD and considering the pace of population aging worldwide, more research is needed to map the biomarker landscape in this population13. Similarly, more biomarker research on middle-age, at-risk populations is needed given the importance for prevention efforts in such populations (Box 3).

Although biomarkers form the cornerstone for the next-generation clinical care pathway for AD, their use is currently limited in clinical practice. Clinicians may be reluctant to discuss biomarkers to avoid burdening their patients, perhaps in part because there are still uncertainties regarding the clinical utility of a biomarker-based diagnosis. These uncertainties may result in some clinicians steering their patients away from further biomarker testing88. Moreover, clinicians vary in their approach to informing a patient they have early disease, with about one-half of clinicians preferring not to use the term MCI88. Web-based tools are emerging to support clinicians and patients with decisions on diagnostic testing, interpretation of individually tailored biomarker test results, and the communication of test results to individuals and their families89. Clinicians should receive appropriate education and practical training on the use of new tools and assessments5,67,90.

Use of digital health technologies in clinical care pathway

The rise of digital health technologies represents another major opportunity to improve the AD clinical care pathway (Fig. 1). Such technologies are particularly poised for early detection/case finding and tracking longitudinal disease progression and/or treatment response.

The transition from traditional cognitive testing to nonintrusive digital assessment offers several advantages. First, nonintrusive testing offers ecological validity owing to the patient assessment in their normal environment and outside the hospital setting. Second, thanks to its convenience, digital assessments can be more frequent as compared to traditional in-clinic assessments, thus allowing documentation of, and control for, day-to-day variations in cognitive function. Third, assessment of everyday activities as a surrogate indicator of abstract cognitive functions increases the functional relevance of the patient assessment. And finally, zero-effort technologies provide access to patients outside standard cognitive testing, such as individuals with advanced stages of dementia, those with reduced hearing, or those who are illiterate42. Digital cognitive testing also has the potential to overcome the socioeconomic and cultural biases embedded in some traditional neuropsychological tests.

In the near term, digital health technologies that require active input from the user to assess changes in cognition, function and quality of life are under development29,42,91. In the long term, the rapid progress in sensor-based technologies, including mobile and wearable devices (smartphones and smart watches) may support increasingly early detection of subtle changes associated with AD onset (for example, speech/language, oculomotor skills and movement) in a continuous, passive and unobtrusive manner (that is, digital biomarkers). This will enable risk assessment, screening and disease prediction with little or no active engagement by the participants42,91,92,93,94,95,96,97,98. As an example, the Oregon Center for Aging & Technology (ORCATECH)/Collaborative Aging Research Using Technology (CART) platform utilizes ambient technologies and wearables to longitudinally monitor cognition, physical mobility, sleep and the level of social engagement in the homes of older adults99. Such data can be integrated and analyzed to find meaningful behaviors that identify people at different stages of cognitive decline100. Digital health technologies will play a central role in an integrated care model (for example, the Integrated Care for Older People (ICOPE) recommended by the World Health Organization) that not only focuses on cognition but also addresses other functions that maintain brain research, such as mobility, psychology, vitality, hearing and vision101,102,103.

Important considerations for the use of digital technologies include privacy issues, specificity and sensitivity to AD versus other causes of cognitive impairment or dementia, user friendliness, reliability, costs and access, among others42,104. Once in clinical practice, the ultimate goal of digital health technologies is to facilitate patient self-management and maintain people living independently for as long as possible42,105,106.

Challenges and potential solutions: a holistic perspective

With biomarker-guided, pathway-based targeted therapies emerging, modeling studies predict that health care systems in many regions/countries will not be able to meet the demand of patients for diagnosis and treatment of AD107,108,109,110. In the United States, ~15 million individuals with MCI would need to be evaluated by specialists, undergo diagnostic testing and pursue treatment107. Current estimates show that the expected caseload of patients will result in long average wait times for specialist visits (~50 months) with many patients developing AD dementia while on waiting lists107,111. The strained capacity of memory specialists will limit access to diagnosis and treatment107,111.

There are additional obstacles to meet the demand of people with AD. Although some countries have dementia plans in place, the emphasis is often on the management of patients with descriptive dementia syndromes and does not adequately address prodromal symptomatic MCI, and etiology in general or early-stage disease112,113,114. Coverage of services is also limited, especially for routine use of confirmatory biomarker tests. For countries with the capacity to absorb increases in service demand, there may not be an incentive to scale up patient volume due to budgetary considerations112. Moreover, there will be challenges keeping pace with the necessary infrastructure to accommodate recommended procedures, such as adding PET tracer manufacturing capacity and installing PET scanners, increasing the volume of biomarker testing, ensuring sufficient availability and accessibility to infusion centers and having the necessary infrastructure for monitoring treatment safety and efficacy112,115,116. Other potential issues also include clinician capacity and capabilities; recent reports show a limited number of dementia specialists in the United States, Canada, Europe and Japan, and clinicians may be reluctant to evaluate a patient for a decline in cognitive function if they don’t feel adequately trained or believe that there are no therapeutic advantages to identifying a decline in cognitive function112,113.

With these obstacles and challenges, there is a pressing need to determine the essential steps toward system preparedness for the next-generation AD clinical care pathway. Primary care is a critical entry point into health care systems with a larger number of general providers compared with specialist services107,112. Better tools are being developed to identify and triage patients in the primary care setting29. Digital health technologies, including digital cognitive assessments, have the potential to detect early cognitive decline and monitor progression, while the emerging blood-based biomarkers—following analytical and clinical validation—could be used to enhance the likelihood of AD as the etiology of the observed cognitive decline31,32,42,97,117. To this end, a study showed that a brief cognitive test in combination with a blood-based biomarker test of AD pathophysiology at the primary care level can substantially improve triaging in primary care and lead to reduced waiting times for a specialist visit during the diagnostic process31. Besides diagnostic evaluation, prognostic information including the risk of disease progression is important to guide treatment decisions. For example, for cardiovascular diseases, the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology have issued predictive equations to guide treatment decisions based on projected risk of cardiovascular events; similar tools for AD could give clinicians a holistic view of a patient’s risk of progression118. To this end, the Interceptor Project in Italy is monitoring a group of patients with early-stage cognitive decline to determine factors from the initial evaluation of the patient that could predict progression119.

Telehealth will be an essential component of the next-generation pathway by providing coordinated care between a patient, care partners and clinicians (that is, nurse, PCP and specialist), and will allow access to memory care and remote monitoring in individuals who cannot leave home, or in those without adequate transportation or living in a rural area120. More defined hub and spoke arrangements linking PCPs to specialists through telehealth and related technologies may facilitate care by coordinated teams.

Better care models and incentives are needed to increase a PCP’s involvement in AD care. For example, cognitive screening is a mandatory requirement of the driver’s license renewal process for older people in Japan, while walk-in clinics are available for screening and consultation in memory centers in Korea110. The emergence of telecare-enabled specialist support has helped to empower PCP sites in the United States107. In addition, accountability schemes have emerged as incentives, such as use of age-adjusted dementia diagnosis rates as a quality measure for general practitioners in the United Kingdom112.

Specialty care for AD will need to evolve to accommodate a shift from the current focus on diagnosis often at late stages of the disease and counseling to more emphasis on diagnosing the disease at early stages and offering new treatments that target the underlying pathophysiology. For example, memory clinics have been logistically located near general hospitals in the United Kingdom to provide one-stop, large-scale practices that can handle all aspects of care with biomarker testing, differential diagnosis and infusion therapy112. Agile learning health care systems will be required to adjust continuously to new and emerging therapies for AD and related disorders.

Ethnic, socioeconomic and racial disparities have been identified in people with AD121,122,123. Differences in risk factors (for example, genetics, comorbid cardiovascular disease or metabolic syndrome) between races may play a role in the incidence and prevalence of AD, while cultural factors (for example, lack of access to medical care, trust issues between marginalized groups and the health care system) may influence diagnosis and treatment121,122,123. Inherent biases may exist in cognitive screening tools that complicate the diagnosis of AD in less educated groups121 and there is an underrepresentation of marginalized groups in clinical research and clinical trials122,124,125. Improving diverse participation in clinical research and clinical trials is paramount to understanding how factors like race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, gender, sexual orientation, education and culture interact with biological factors associated with AD122,125,126,127,128,129. The next-generation clinical care pathway will need to address the issue of diversity as well as social determinants of health to optimize equity of care for all individuals with AD121,122,123,124,125.

Conclusions and perspectives

The conceptualization of AD as a clinical–biological construct and the emerging biomarker-guided pathway-based treatments targeting AD-associated pathophysiology highlight the importance and urgency of developing and implementing a global framework for the next-generation AD clinical care pathway. Detecting the disease at its initial and early stages will be crucial, and primary care will have an important role in case finding. Utilizing a ‘memory care enabled’ workforce including nurse practitioners, community health workers and geriatric care managers may reduce the burden and complete reliance on the PCPs as the gateway to diagnosis and care130. Diagnosis will include biomarker assessments, which will also guide the initiation of treatment as well as monitoring of treatment response, dose adjustments, and treatment continuation or cessation. Including patients and care partners early in the development process will ensure acceptance and accessibility of novel pathways and technology for those most affected. Although patient and public involvement has been utilized in other medical specialties such as oncology and pediatrics, a pragmatic approach needs to be adapted and transformed for AD clinical care.

The successful development and implementation of the next-generation AD clinical care pathway outlined above depends on close interaction and cross-functional collaboration with stakeholders including regulators, pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry, policymakers, and payors. While the current paper centered on the clinician and patient as well as the care partner perspective, optimization of the clinical care pathway needs to be complemented by the health system and cost viewpoints. Both perspectives need to be integrated in the near future once a clinical care pathway addressing the most urgent needs of patients and family has been agreed on by health care system stakeholders.

The next-generation clinical care pathway for AD must address the critical issues of diversity and inclusion to ensure health equity for the enormous and rapidly growing number of AD patients across the globe. A starting point is to ensure more inclusive participation in observational biomarker research and in clinical trials so that therapeutic approaches will be broadly applicable and available. The new pathway needs to be adapted to local resources and capabilities to maximize the health benefit for patients. From there it will become clear that the next step is to devise the roadmap toward a transformation to precision neurology—a holistic and synergistic approach to AD care that encompasses genetic, biological (that is, biomarker), clinical and environmental profiling of individual patients to guide the development of individualized treatment schemes and ultimately, prevention and extension of brain healthspan131,132,133,134,135.