Publications & Posters

A multicentre validation study of the diagnostic value of plasma neurofilament light

Nature Communications | June 7, 2021

Ashton NJ, Janelidze S, Al Khleifat A, Leuzy A, van der Ende EL, Karikari TK, Benedet AL, Pascoal TA, Lleó A, Parnetti L, Galimberti D, Bonanni L, Pilotto A, Padovani A, Lycke J, Novakova L, Axelsson M, Velayudhan L, Rabinovici GD, Miller B, Pariante C, Nikkheslat N, Resnick SM, Thambisetty M, Schöll M, Fernández-Eulate G, Gil-Bea FJ, López de Munain A, Al-Chalabi A, Rosa-Neto P, Strydom A, Svenningsson P, Stomrud E, Santillo A, Aarsland D, van Swieten JC, Palmqvist S, Zetterberg H, Blennow K, Hye A and Hansson O

Nature communications. 2021;12:3400

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-23620-z

This study was performed using a Simoa Homebrew assay.

Abstract

Increased cerebrospinal fluid neurofilament light (NfL) is a recognized biomarker for neurodegeneration that can also be assessed in blood. Here, we investigate plasma NfL as a marker of neurodegeneration in 13 neurodegenerative disorders, Down syndrome, depression and cognitively unimpaired controls from two multicenter cohorts: King’s College London (n = 805) and the Swedish BioFINDER study (n = 1,464). Plasma NfL was significantly increased in all cortical neurodegenerative disorders, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and atypical parkinsonian disorders. We demonstrate that plasma NfL is clinically useful in identifying atypical parkinsonian disorders in patients with parkinsonism, dementia in individuals with Down syndrome, dementia among psychiatric disorders, and frontotemporal dementia in patients with cognitive impairment. Data-driven cut-offs highlighted the fundamental importance of age-related clinical cut-offs for disorders with a younger age of onset. Finally, plasma NfL performs best when applied to indicate no underlying neurodegeneration, with low false positives, in all age-related cut-offs.