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NfL and pNfH are increased in Friedreich's ataxia

Authors :
Hayer, Stefanie Nicole Liepelt, Inga Barro, Christian Wilke, Carlo Kuhle, Jens Martus, Peter Schoels, Ludger Schulz, Joerg Bernhard Reetz, Kathrin Fedosov, Kathrin Didszun, Claire Klockgether, Thomas Giordano, Ilaria Pandolfo, Massimo Depondt, Chantal Rai, Myriam Boesch, Sylvia and Nachbauer, Wolfgang Eigentler, Andreas Indelicato, Elisabetta and Giunti, Paola Parkinson, Michael Manso, Katarina and Thomas-Black, Gilbert Garcia-Moreno, Hector Solanky, Nita and Abeti, Rosella Polke, James Labrum, Robin Garrido, Rodriguez de Rivera Francisco Javier Mascias, Javier Velasco, Sanchez Sara and Garcia, Secades Sergio Mariotti, Caterina Nanetti, Lorenzo and Castaldo, Anna Mongelli, Alessia Fichera, Mario and Klopstock, Thomas Karin, Ivan Stendel, Claudia Radelfahr, Florentine Durr, Alexandra Biet, Marie Charles, Perrine and Ewenczyk, Claire Just, Jennifer Koutsis, Georgios Walsh, Richard Bertini, Enrico EFACTS Study Grp
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Objective To assess neurofilaments as neurodegenerative biomarkers in serum of patients with Friedreich's ataxia. Methods Single molecule array measurements of neurofilament light (NfL) and heavy chain (pNfH) in 99 patients with genetically confirmed Friedreich's ataxia. Correlation of NfL/pNfH serum levels with disease severity, disease duration, age, age at onset, and GAA repeat length. Results Median serum levels of NfL were 21.2 pg/ml (range 3.6-49.3) in controls and 26.1 pg/ml (0-78.1) in Friedreich's ataxia (p = 0.002). pNfH levels were 23.5 pg/ml (13.3-43.3) in controls and 92 pg/ml (3.1-303) in Friedreich's ataxia (p = 0.0004). NfL levels were significantly increased in younger patients (age 16-31 years, p < 0.001) and patients aged 32-47 years (p = 0.008), but not in patients of age 48 years and older (p = 0.41). In a longitudinal assessment, there was no difference in NfL levels in 14 patients with repeated sampling 2 years after baseline measurement. Levels of NfL correlated inversely with GAA1 repeat length (r = - 0.24, p = 0.02) but not with disease severity (r = - 0.13, p = 0.22), disease duration (r = - 0.06, p = 0.53), or age at onset (r = 0.05, p = 0.62). Conclusion Serum levels of NfL and pNfH are elevated in Friedreich's ataxia, but differences to healthy controls decrease with increasing age. Long-term longitudinal data are required to explore whether this reflects a selection bias from early death of more severely affected individuals or a slowing down of the neurodegenerative process with age. In a pilot study over 2 years of follow-up-a period relevant for biomarkers indicating treatment effects-we found NfL levels to be stable.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2127..26a4eac9069991e8c2f5312642d61d36