Skip to main content
Evidence-Based Supplement Research
Evidence-Based Supplement Research

A paradigm of the diagnosis and treatment for the whole process of Alzheimer's disease.

  • 2026-05-20
  • Annals of medicine 58(1)
    • Jing Shi
    • Yifeng Du
    • Huali Wang
    • Nan Zhang
    • Wei Chen
    • Jingnian Ni
    • Xianghui Lu
    • Yongan Sun
    • Gang Wang
    • Jun Liu
    • Wei Zhang
    • Mingqing Wei
    • Ting Li
    • Bo Zhou
    • Fuyao Li
    • Chao Wei
    • Lulu Yao
    • Hengge Xie
    • Jinzhou Tian

Study Design

Type
Review

Introduction

The clinical management of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is still constrained by the fact that its incompletely understood pathogenesis, difficulty in early diagnosis and the limited long-term treatment benefits so far. This article summarizes a regional perspective on the diagnosis and treatment of AD from the Alzheimer's Disease Chinese (ADC) guideline working group, aiming to improve the whole-process management of AD.

Discussion

The article presents a comprehensive overview of a proposed diagnostic and therapeutic paradigm for AD, consisting of a three-dimensional diagnostic framework and a sequential therapy concept. Crucially, while biological biomarkers of AD are present at all stages, they may be unrelated to clinical severity. To address this, the diagnostic framework combines core clinical criteria with early-changing biomarkers, syndrome staging and traditional Chinese medicine (TCM)-based pattern phenotyping. This integrated, simplified and practical approach enhances diagnostic certainty and its correlation with clinical severity. This sequential therapy is a stage-adaptive treatment plan adjusted according to the disease progression, utilizing a dynamic, multi-target combination therapy. Unlike the existing unchanging single-target therapies, this approach provides specific mechanistic interventions tailored to each stage to prolong efficacy and delay disease progression.

Conclusions

This paradigm provides a whole-process, stage-oriented approach to AD diagnosis and management that may improve translational relevance, clinical applicability and continuity of care in real-world settings. Future cohort-based validation studies are needed to confirm its diagnostic performance and clinical benefits, and to refine its implementation.

Research Insights

    Back to top