DOI: 10.1002/dad2.70405 ISSN: 2352-8729

Transient plasma p‐tau217 elevations after electroconvulsive therapy: A two‐case report

Henri Hokkanen, Emilia Hintsala, Jaakko Hotta, Terhi Rantamäki‐Häkkinen

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Plasma phosphorylated tau (p‐tau217) is increasingly used in the evaluation of Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, factors influencing its interpretation in real‐world settings remain incompletely defined.

METHODS

We describe a patient with repeated measurements of p‐tau217 after an acute course of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), complemented by a second patient with repeated measurements obtained during maintenance ECT.

RESULTS

In the primary case, p‐tau217 was markedly elevated 3 weeks after completion of an acute ECT course (5.360 pg/mL; normal < 0.185 pg/mL), followed by a decline toward normal levels within weeks and normalization at follow‐up. Cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers and neuropsychological assessment were normal. A second patient undergoing maintenance ECT demonstrated fluctuating levels of p‐tau217.

DISCUSSION

ECT may induce transient elevations of p‐tau217 that could be misinterpreted as suggestive of AD pathology. The temporal profile suggests a reversible process distinct from amyloid‐driven tau pathology. Deferring p‐tau217 testing after ECT may reduce false‐positive results.

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