4.6 Article

High diagnostic performance of independent alpha-synuclein seed amplification assays for detection of early Parkinson's disease

Journal

ACTA NEUROPATHOLOGICA COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40478-021-01282-8

Keywords

Seed amplification assay; Alpha-synuclein; Parkinson's disease; RT-QuIC; PMCA; Synucleinopathy

Categories

Funding

  1. Intramural Research Program of the NIAID
  2. Michael J. Fox Foundation
  3. NIH [R01 AG055053]
  4. MJFF Grant [16712]
  5. AbbVie
  6. Marlene and Paolo Fresco Institute for Parkinson's and Movement Disorders
  7. Jain Foundation
  8. Parekh Center for Interdisciplinary Neurology at NYU
  9. Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research
  10. [T32AG052909]

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Alpha Synuclein seed amplification assays (Alpha Syn-SAAs) are considered promising diagnostic tools for Parkinson's disease and related synucleinopathies, showing high diagnostic accuracy in multiple patient cohorts. This study compared results from three independent laboratories and found high reproducibility and diagnostic performance of the assay.
Alpha-synuclein seed amplification assays (alpha Syn-SAAs) are promising diagnostic tools for Parkinson's disease (PD) and related synucleinopathies. They enable detection of seeding-competent alpha-synuclein aggregates in living patients and have shown high diagnostic accuracy in several PD and other synucleinopathy patient cohorts. However, there has been confusion about alpha Syn-SAAs for their methodology, nomenclature, and relative accuracies when performed by various laboratories. We compared alpha Syn-SAA results obtained from three independent laboratories to evaluate reproducibility across methodological variations. We utilized the Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative (PPMI) cohort, with DATSCAN data available for comparison, since clinical diagnosis of early de novo PD is critical for neuroprotective trials, which often use dopamine transporter imaging to enrich their cohorts. Blinded cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples for a randomly selected subset of PPMI subjects (30 PD, 30 HC, and 20 SWEDD), from both baseline and year 3 collections for the PD and HC groups (140 total CSF samples) were analyzed in parallel by each lab according to their own established and optimized alpha Syn-SAA protocols. The alpha Syn-SAA results were remarkably similar across laboratories, displaying high diagnostic performance (sensitivity ranging from 86 to 96% and specificity from 93 to 100%). The assays were also concordant for samples with results that differed from clinical diagnosis, including 2 PD patients determined to be clinically inconsistent with PD at later time points. All three assays also detected 2 SWEDD subjects as alpha Syn-SAA positive who later developed PD with abnormal DAT-SPECT. These multi-laboratory results confirm the reproducibility and value of alpha Syn-SAA as diagnostic tools, illustrate reproducibility of the assay in expert hands, and suggest that alpha Syn-SAA has potential to provide earlier diagnosis with comparable or superior accuracy to existing methods.

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