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Introduction
Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is a devastating neurodegenerative disorder for which readily available biomarkers are needed to monitor disease progression and response to future therapies. Neurofilament light chain (NfL), a cytoskeletal protein, is elevated in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of patients with FTD, correlating with disease severity.1 ,2 As CSF sampling is more invasive than venepuncture and requires higher subject compliance, we tested the hypothesis that NfL levels in FTD are elevated not only in CSF, but also in serum. NfL levels in FTD were also compared with those in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).3
Methods
CSF and serum samples of a consecutive series of 41 FTD, 25 ALS and 46 healthy control subjects were collected from 2009 until 2014 (see online supplement 1: Methodological and statistical details, see online supplement 2: Subject characteristics). Only participants with normal CSF white cell counts (cell count <5/µL) and normal CSF amyloid-β levels (amyloid-β-42 >600 pg/mL, Innotest ELISA, Innogenetics, Belgium) were included. CSF and serum NfL concentrations were measured by a previously established electrochemiluminescence immunoassay.4 CSF levels of total tau (h-tau) were determined by a commercial ELISA (Innogenetics).
Supplemental material
Results
NfL levels in CSF differed significantly between FTD, ALS and control subjects (F (2, 109)=88.36, p<0.001, one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA), calculated for log-transformed levels, figure 1A), also if corrected for age (F (2, 108)=88.66, p<0.001). Both patients with FTD (2557 pg/mL (median); 1760–3167, (IQR)) and patients with ALS (6658 pg/mL; (4205–10438)) showed significantly higher CSF NfL levels than controls (981 pg/mL; (777–1374)). NfL levels in ALS were significantly higher than in FTD (all p<0.001, two-sided Student's t tests, Bonferroni-corrected, effect sizes: FTD vs controls r=0.65, ALS vs controls r=0.85, ALS vs FTD r=0.59).
Footnotes
CW and OP are shared first authors.
JK and MS are shared last authors.
Contributors CW contributed to the design and conceptualisation of the study, analysis of the data, drafting and revision of the manuscript. OP contributed to the design and conceptualisation of the study, revision of the manuscript. CD, BR, AA, CB and LM contributed to the acquisition of data, revision of the manuscript. WM contributed to the acquisition of data, design and conceptualisation of the study, revision of the manuscript. JK contributed to the acquisition of data, analysis of the data, design and conceptualisation of the study, revision of the manuscript. MS contributed to the acquisition of data, design and conceptualisation of the study, drafting and revision of the manuscript.
Competing interests WM serves on the editorial board of PLOS ONE, received funding from the European Union, Michael J Fox Foundation, Robert Bosch Foundation, Neuroalliance and Janssen, holds part of a patent for the assessment of dyskinesia (German patent office, 102015220741.2) and received speaker's honoraria from GlaxoSmithKline, Abbvie, UCB, Licher MT and Rölke Pharma, unrelated to the current project and manuscript. JK's institution (University Hospital Basel) received in the past 3 years and used exclusively for research support: consulting fees from Novartis and Protagen AG; speaker fees from the Swiss MS Society, Biogen, Novartis, Roche and Genzyme; travel expenses from Merck Serono and Novartis; and grants from ECTRIMS Research Fellowship Programme, University of Basel, Swiss MS Society, Swiss National Research Foundation, Bayer (Switzerland) AG, Genzyme and Novartis. MS received speaker's honoraria and research support from Actelion Pharmaceuticals, unrelated to the current project and manuscript.
Ethics approval Ethics committee of the University of Tübingen.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.