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Serum neurofilament light chain in hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis: validation in real-life practice.

BACKGROUND: Neurofilament light chain (NfL) has emerged as a sensitive biomarker in hereditary transthyretin amyloid polyneuropathy (ATTRv-PN). We hypothesise that NfL can identify conversion of gene carriers to symptomatic disease, and guide treatment approaches.

METHODS: Serum NfL concentration was measured longitudinally (2015-2022) in 59 presymptomatic and symptomatic ATTR variant carriers. Correlations between NfL and demographics, biochemistry and staging scores were performed as well as longitudinal changes pre- and post-treatment, and in asymptomatic and symptomatic cohorts. Receiver-operating analyses were performed to determine cut-off values.

RESULTS: NfL levels correlated with examination scores (CMTNS, NIS and MRC; all p  < .01) and increased with disease severity (PND and FAP; all p  < .05). NfL was higher in symptomatic and sensorimotor converters, than asymptomatic or sensory converters irrespective of time (all p  < .001). Symptomatic or sensorimotor converters were discriminated from asymptomatic patients by NfL concentrations >64.5 pg/ml (sensitivity= 91.9%, specificity = 88.5%), whereas asymptomatic patients could only be discriminated from sensory or sensorimotor converters or symptomatic individuals by a NfL concentration >88.9 pg/ml (sensitivity = 62.9%, specificity = 96.2%) However, an NfL increment of 17% over 6 months could discriminate asymptomatic from sensory or sensorimotor converters (sensitivity = 88.9%, specificity = 80.0%). NfL reduced with treatment by 36%/year and correlated with TTR suppression ( r  = 0.64, p  = .008).

CONCLUSIONS: This data validates the use of serum NfL to identify conversion to symptomatic disease in ATTRv-PN. NfL levels can guide assessment of disease progression and response to therapies.

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