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1.
J Neurochem ; 149(1): 139-157, 2019 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30720873

ABSTRACT

The main pathophysiological alterations of Alzheimer's disease (AD) include loss of neuronal and synaptic integrity, amyloidogenic processing, and neuroinflammation. Similar alterations can, however, also be observed in cognitively intact older subjects and may prelude the clinical manifestation of AD. The objectives of this prospective cross-sectional study in a cohort of 38 cognitively intact older adults were twofold: (i) to investigate the latent relationship among cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers reflecting the main pathophysiological processes of AD, and (ii) to assess the correlation between these biomarkers and gray matter volume as well as amyloid load. All subjects underwent extensive neuropsychological examinations, CSF sampling, [18 F]-flutemetamol amyloid positron emission tomography, and T1 -weighted magnetic resonance imaging. A factor analysis revealed one factor that explained most of the variance in the CSF biomarker dataset clustering t-tau, α-synuclein, p-tau181 , neurogranin, BACE1, visinin-like protein 1, chitinase-3-like protein 1 (YKL-40), Aß1-40 and Aß1-38 . Higher scores on this factor correlated with lower gray matter volume and with higher amyloid load in the precuneus. At the level of individual CSF biomarkers, levels of visinin-like protein 1, neurogranin, BACE1, Aß1-40 , Aß1-38, and YKL-40 all correlated inversely with gray matter volume of the precuneus. These findings demonstrate that in cognitively intact older subjects, CSF levels of synaptic and neuronal integrity biomarkers, amyloidogenic processing and measures of innate immunity (YKL-40) display a latent structure of common variance, which is associated with loss of structural integrity of brain regions implicated in the earliest stages of AD. OPEN SCIENCE BADGES: This article has received a badge for *Open Materials* because it provided all relevant information to reproduce the study in the manuscript, and for *Preregistration* because the study was pre-registered at https://osf.io/7qm9t/. The complete Open Science Disclosure form for this article can be found at the end of the article. More information about the Open Practices badges can be found at https://cos.io/our-services/open-science-badges/.


Subject(s)
Amyloid beta-Peptides/analysis , Biomarkers/cerebrospinal fluid , Gray Matter/pathology , Parietal Lobe/pathology , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Male
2.
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry ; 90(12): 1338-1346, 2019 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31175169

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Inflammation is a key pathological hallmark in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), which seems to be linked to the disease progression. It is not clear what the added diagnostic and prognostic value are of inflammatory markers in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of patients with ALS. METHODS: Chitotriosidase-1 (CHIT1), chitinase-3-like protein 1 (YKL-40) and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) were measured in CSF and serum of patients with ALS (n=105), disease controls (n=102) and patients with a disease mimicking ALS (n=16). The discriminatory performance was evaluated by means of a receiver operating characteristic curve analysis. CSF and serum levels were correlated with several clinical parameters. A multivariate Cox regression analysis, including eight other established prognostic markers, was used to evaluate survival in ALS. RESULTS: In CSF, CHIT1, YKL-40 and MCP-1 showed a weak discriminatory performance between ALS and ALS mimics (area under the curve: 0.79, p<0.0001; 0.72, p=0.001; 0.75, p=0.001, respectively). CHIT1 and YKL-40 correlated with the disease progression rate (ρ=0.28, p=0.009; ρ=0.34, p=0.002, respectively). CHIT1 levels were elevated in patients with a higher number of regions displaying motor neuron degeneration (one vs three regions: 4248 vs 13 518 pg/mL, p = 0.0075). In CSF, YKL-40 and MCP-1 were independently associated with survival (HR: 29.7, p=0.0003; 6.14, p=0.001, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Our findings show that inflammation in patients with ALS reflects the disease progression as an independent predictor of survival. Our data encourage the use of inflammatory markers in patient stratification and as surrogate markers of therapy response in clinical trials.


Subject(s)
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/cerebrospinal fluid , Biomarkers/cerebrospinal fluid , Inflammation/cerebrospinal fluid , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Case-Control Studies , Diagnosis, Differential , Disease Progression , Female , Humans , Kaplan-Meier Estimate , Male , Middle Aged , Predictive Value of Tests , Prognosis , ROC Curve , Survival Analysis
3.
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry ; 89(4): 367-373, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29054919

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Phosphorylated neurofilament heavy chain (pNfH) levels are elevated in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Instead of CSF, we explored blood as an alternative source to measure pNfH in patients with ALS. METHODS: In this single centre retrospective study, 85 patients with ALS, 215 disease controls (DC) and 31 ALS mimics were included. Individual serum pNfH concentrations were correlated with concentrations in CSF and with several clinical parameters. The performance characteristics of pNfH in CSF and serum of patients with ALS and controls were calculated and compared using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves. RESULTS: CSF and serum pNfH concentrations in patients with ALS correlated well (r=0.652, p<0.0001) and were significantly increased compared with DC (p<0.0001) and ALS mimics (p<0.0001). CSF pNfH outperformed serum pNfH in discriminating patients with ALS from DC and ALS mimics (difference between area under the ROC curves: p=0.0001 and p=0.0005; respectively). Serum pNfH correlated inversely with symptom duration (r=-0.315, p=0.0033). CSF and serum pNfH were lower when the disease progression rate was slower (r=0.279, p<0.01 and r=0.289, p<0.01; respectively). Unlike CSF, serum pNfH did not correlate with the burden of clinical and electromyographic motor neuron dysfunction. CONCLUSIONS: CSF and serum pNfH concentrations are elevated in patients with ALS and correlate with the disease progression rate. Moreover, CSF pNfH correlates with the burden of motor neuron dysfunction. Our findings encourage further pursuit of CSF and serum pNfH concentrations in the diagnostic pathway of patients suspected to have ALS.


Subject(s)
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/cerebrospinal fluid , Neurofilament Proteins/cerebrospinal fluid , Phosphoproteins/cerebrospinal fluid , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/diagnosis , Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/physiopathology , Case-Control Studies , Child , Electromyography , Female , Humans , Intermediate Filaments/metabolism , Male , Middle Aged , Neurofilament Proteins/metabolism , Young Adult
4.
Alzheimers Res Ther ; 12(1): 162, 2020 12 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33278904

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Blood-based amyloid biomarkers may provide a non-invasive, cost-effective and scalable manner for detecting cerebral amyloidosis in early disease stages. METHODS: In this prospective cross-sectional study, we quantified plasma Aß1-42/Aß1-40 ratios with both routinely available ELISAs and novel SIMOA Amyblood assays, and provided a head-to-head comparison of their performances to detect cerebral amyloidosis in a nondemented elderly cohort (n = 199). Participants were stratified according to amyloid-PET status, and the performance of plasma Aß1-42/Aß1-40 to detect cerebral amyloidosis was assessed using receiver operating characteristic analysis. We additionally investigated the correlations of plasma Aß ratios with amyloid-PET and CSF Alzheimer's disease biomarkers, as well as platform agreement using Passing-Bablok regression and Bland-Altman analysis for both Aß isoforms. RESULTS: ELISA and SIMOA plasma Aß1-42/Aß1-40 detected cerebral amyloidosis with identical accuracy (ELISA: area under curve (AUC) 0.78, 95% CI 0.72-0.84; SIMOA: AUC 0.79, 95% CI 0.73-0.85), and both increased the performance of a basic demographic model including only age and APOE-ε4 genotype (p ≤ 0.02). ELISA and SIMOA had positive predictive values of respectively 41% and 36% in cognitively normal elderly and negative predictive values all exceeding 88%. Plasma Aß1-42/Aß1-40 correlated similarly with amyloid-PET for both platforms (Spearman ρ = - 0.32, p <  0.0001), yet correlations with CSF Aß1-42/t-tau were stronger for ELISA (ρ = 0.41, p = 0.002) than for SIMOA (ρ = 0.29, p = 0.03). Plasma Aß levels demonstrated poor agreement between ELISA and SIMOA with concentrations of both Aß1-42 and Aß1-40 measured by SIMOA consistently underestimating those measured by ELISA. CONCLUSIONS: ELISA and SIMOA demonstrated equivalent performances in detecting cerebral amyloidosis through plasma Aß1-42/Aß1-40, both with high negative predictive values, making them equally suitable non-invasive prescreening tools for clinical trials by reducing the number of necessary PET scans for clinical trial recruitment. TRIAL REGISTRATION: EudraCT 2009-014475-45 (registered on 23 Sept 2009) and EudraCT 2013-004671-12 (registered on 20 May 2014, https://www.clinicaltrialsregister.eu/ctr-search/trial/2013-004671-12/BE ).


Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease , Amyloidosis , Aged , Amyloid beta-Peptides , Amyloidosis/diagnostic imaging , Biomarkers , Cross-Sectional Studies , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Humans , Peptide Fragments , Prospective Studies
5.
SLAS Technol ; 23(2): 188-197, 2018 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29346009

ABSTRACT

The lack of (inter-)laboratory standardization has hampered the application of universal cutoff values for Alzheimer's disease (AD) cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers and their transfer to general clinical practice. The automation of the AD biomarker immunoassays is suggested to generate more robust results than using manual testing. Open-access platforms will facilitate the integration of automation for novel biomarkers, allowing the introduction of the protein profiling concept. A feasibility study was performed on an automated open-access platform of the commercial immunoassays for the 42-amino-acid isoform of amyloid-ß (Aß1-42), Aß1-40, and total tau in CSF. Automated Aß1-42, Aß1-40, and tau immunoassays were performed within predefined acceptance criteria for bias and imprecision. Similar accuracy was obtained for ready-to-use calibrators as for reconstituted lyophilized kit calibrators. When compared with the addition of a standard curve in each test run, the use of a master calibrator curve, determined before and applied to each batch analysis as the standard curve, yielded an acceptable overall bias of -2.6% and -0.9% for Aß1-42 and Aß1-40, respectively, with an imprecision profile of 6.2% and 8.4%, respectively. Our findings show that transfer of commercial manual immunoassays to fully automated open-access platforms is feasible, as it performs according to universal acceptance criteria.


Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease/diagnosis , Automation, Laboratory/methods , Biomarkers/cerebrospinal fluid , Cerebrospinal Fluid/chemistry , Immunoassay/methods , Amyloid beta-Peptides/cerebrospinal fluid , Feasibility Studies , Humans , tau Proteins/cerebrospinal fluid
6.
Neurology ; 88(24): 2302-2309, 2017 Jun 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28500227

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To determine the diagnostic performance and prognostic value of phosphorylated neurofilament heavy chain (pNfH) and neurofilament light chain (NfL) in CSF as possible biomarkers for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) at the diagnostic phase. METHODS: We measured CSF pNfH and NfL concentrations in 220 patients with ALS, 316 neurologic disease controls (DC), and 50 genuine disease mimics (DM) to determine and assess the accuracy of the diagnostic cutoff value for pNfH and NfL and to correlate with other clinical parameters. RESULTS: pNfH was most specific for motor neuron disease (specificity 88.2% [confidence interval (CI) 83.0%-92.3%]). pNfH had the best performance to differentially diagnose patients with ALS from DM with a sensitivity of 90.7% (CI 84.9%-94.8%), a specificity of 88.0% (CI 75.7%-95.5%) and a likelihood ratio of 7.6 (CI 3.6-16.0) at a cutoff of 768 pg/mL. CSF pNfH and NfL levels were significantly lower in slow disease progressors, however, with a poor prognostic performance with respect to the disease progression rate. CSF pNfH and NfL levels increased significantly as function of the number of regions with both upper and lower motor involvement. CONCLUSIONS: In particular, CSF pNfH concentrations show an added value as diagnostic biomarkers for ALS, whereas the prognostic value of pNfH and NfL warrants further investigation. Both pNfH and NfL correlated with the extent of motor neuron degeneration. CLASSIFICATION OF EVIDENCE: This study provides Class II evidence that elevated concentrations of CSF pNfH and NfL can accurately identify patients with ALS.


Subject(s)
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/cerebrospinal fluid , Neurofilament Proteins/cerebrospinal fluid , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis/genetics , Biomarkers/cerebrospinal fluid , Child , Cross-Sectional Studies , Diagnosis, Differential , Disease Progression , Female , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Middle Aged , Phosphorylation , Prognosis , Severity of Illness Index , Single-Blind Method , Young Adult
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