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Neurofilament as a potential biomarker for spinal muscular atrophy

Author:
Darras, Basil T.  Crawford, Thomas O.  Finkel, Richard S.  Mercuri, Eugenio  De Vivo, Darryl C.  Oskoui, Maryam  Tizzano, Eduardo F.  Ryan, Monique M.  Muntoni, Francesco  Zhao, Guolin  Staropoli, John  McCampbell, Alexander  Petrillo, Marco  Stebbins, Christopher  Fradette, Stephanie  Farwell, Wildon  Sumner, Charlotte J.  


Journal:
ANNALS OF CLINICAL AND TRANSLATIONAL NEUROLOGY


Issue Date:
2019


Abstract(summary):

Objective To evaluate plasma phosphorylated neurofilament heavy chain (pNF-H) as a biomarker in spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). Methods Levels of pNF-H were measured using the ProteinSimpleA (R) platform in plasma samples from infants with SMA enrolled in ENDEAR (NCT02193074) and infants/children without neurological disease. Results Median pNF-H plasma level was 167.0 pg/mL (7.46-7,030; n =3D 34) in children without SMA (aged 7 weeks-18 years) and was higher in those aged < 1 versus 1-18 years (P =3D 0.0002). In ENDEAR participants with infantile-onset SMA, median baseline pNF-H level (15,400 pg/mL; 2390-50,100; n =3D 117) was similar to 10-fold higher than that of age-matched infants without SMA (P < 0.0001) and similar to 90-fold higher than children without SMA (P < 0.0001). Higher pretreatment pNF-H levels in infants with SMA were associated with younger age at symptom onset, diagnosis, and first dose; lower baseline Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Infant Test of Neuromuscular Disorders score; and lower peroneal compound muscle potential amplitude. Nusinersen treatment was associated with a rapid and greater decline in pNF-H levels: nusinersen-treated infants experienced a steep 71.9% decline at 2 months to 90.1% decline at 10 months; sham control-treated infants declined steadily by 16.2% at 2 months and 60.3% at 10 months. Interpretation Plasma pNF-H levels are elevated in infants with SMA. Levels inversely correlate with age at first dose and several markers of disease severity. Nusinersen treatment is associated with a significant decline in pNF-H levels followed by relative stabilization. Together these data suggest plasma pNF-H is a promising marker of disease activity/treatment response in infants with SMA.


Page:
932---944


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