Evaluating finger-prick blood collection for remote quantification of neurofilament light in neurological diseases.

IF 4.8 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Annabelle Coleman, Alexiane Touzé, Mena Farag, Marta Pengo, Michael J Murphy, Yara Hassan, Olivia Thackeray, Kate Fayer, Sophie Field, Mitsuko Nakajima, Elizabeth L Broom, Nicola Z Hobbs, Brook Huxford, Natalie Donkor, Ellen Camboe, Kamalesh C Dey, Alexandra Zirra, Aisha Ahmed, Ana Rita Gameiro Costa, Harriet Sorrell, Luca Zampedri, Vittoria Lombardi, Charles Wade, Sean Mangion, Batoul Fneich, Amanda Heslegrave, Henrik Zetterberg, Rachael Scahill, Alastair Noyce, Andrea Malaspina, Jeremy Chataway, Sarah J Tabrizi, Lauren M Byrne
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Abstract

Promising blood-based biomarkers of neuropathology have emerged with potential for therapeutic development and disease monitoring. However, these tools will require specialist tertiary services for integration into clinical management. Remote sampling for biomarker assessment could reduce burden of in-person clinical visits for such tests as well as increasing the sampling frequency and patient geographical outreach. Here, we evaluated a finger-prick blood collection approach for remote quantification of neurofilament light (NfL), a candidate blood-based biomarker evident in various neurological disorders, and other exploratory markers of neuronal injury and neuroinflammation (GFAP, tau). Matched samples from venepuncture and finger-prick were collected and processed into plasma and/or serum to directly compare analyte levels from a multi-disease discovery cohort (n = 54 healthy controls; n = 57 Huntington's disease (HD); n = 34 multiple sclerosis; n = 7 amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; n = 11 Parkinson's disease), and a HD confirmatory cohort (n = 57 healthy controls; n = 64 HD). Two delayed processing conditions were compared, three- and seven-day delay, simulating ambient shipment. Capillary NfL and GFAP concentrations were equivalent to those in venous serum and plasma in the multi-disease discovery cohort and HD confirmatory cohort. Only NfL remained stable after a seven-day processing delay in both venous and capillary serum samples. Using NfL concentrations from capillary blood, we replicated previously published disease group differences measured in venous blood. This data supports our finger-prick approach for remote collection and quantification of NfL. With the widespread applications for NfL across the spectrum of neurological disorders, this has the potential to transform disease monitoring, prognosis, and therapeutic development within clinical practice and research.

评价手指穿刺采血对神经系统疾病中神经丝光的远程定量。
基于血液的神经病理学生物标志物已经出现,具有治疗发展和疾病监测的潜力。然而,这些工具将需要专业的三级服务来整合到临床管理中。生物标志物评估的远程采样可以减轻亲自临床就诊的负担,并增加采样频率和患者地理范围。在这里,我们评估了一种手指刺血采集方法,用于远程量化神经丝光(NfL),这是一种在各种神经疾病中明显的候选血液生物标志物,以及其他神经元损伤和神经炎症的探索性标志物(GFAP, tau)。收集静脉穿刺和手指穿刺的匹配样本,并将其加工成血浆和/或血清,直接比较来自多疾病发现队列(n = 54名健康对照;n = 57例亨廷顿病(HD);N = 34例多发性硬化;N = 7肌萎缩性侧索硬化症;n = 11例帕金森病患者)和一个HD确诊队列(n = 57例健康对照;n = 64 HD)。比较了两种延迟处理条件,3天和7天的延迟,模拟环境运输。在多疾病发现队列和HD确诊队列中,毛细血管NfL和GFAP浓度与静脉血清和血浆浓度相当。在静脉和毛细血管血清样品中,只有NfL在处理延迟7天后保持稳定。使用毛细血管血液中的NfL浓度,我们复制了先前发表的静脉血中测量的疾病组差异。该数据支持我们的手指刺破方法用于NfL的远程收集和量化。随着NfL在神经系统疾病中的广泛应用,它有可能在临床实践和研究中改变疾病监测、预后和治疗开发。
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来源期刊
Journal of Neurology
Journal of Neurology 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
5.00%
发文量
558
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Neurology is an international peer-reviewed journal which provides a source for publishing original communications and reviews on clinical neurology covering the whole field. In addition, Letters to the Editors serve as a forum for clinical cases and the exchange of ideas which highlight important new findings. A section on Neurological progress serves to summarise the major findings in certain fields of neurology. Commentaries on new developments in clinical neuroscience, which may be commissioned or submitted, are published as editorials. Every neurologist interested in the current diagnosis and treatment of neurological disorders needs access to the information contained in this valuable journal.
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