“…As was the case with breast cancer screening 30-years ago, primary care screening tools are needed for AD though significant issues related to fear, stigma and misinformation remain[61]. Additionally, when considering the historical context of the emergence of diagnostic imaging technologies for breast cancer along with the regulatory and reimbursement approval patterns of those technologies[39], the availability of cost- and resource-effective strategies for staging the allocation of diagnostic resources in AD that fit within the existing medical infrastructure will increase the likelihood of regulatory approval for additional imaging modalities, as well as result in more rapid speed-to-market. It is important to be clear that, at this point, blood-based biomarkers are not viewed as “diagnostic”, but rather as the potential first-line in a multi-staged diagnostic process, because they are potentially more cost- and time-effective than other biomarker technologies, and may yield excellent accuracy when compared to primary care screening tools with similar COU[5].…”