Peripheral Signatures of Multidimensional Pathology in Symptomatic and Asymptomatic Creutzfeldt–Jakob Disease
Zhong‐Yun Chen, Min Chu, Yi‐Hao Wang, Rui Liu, Jing Zhang, Ai‐ling Yue, Hua Lu, Qian‐qian He, Jia‐hui Hou, Yu‐fei Chen, Hong Ye, Li‐Yong Wu

TL;DR
This study identifies plasma biomarkers in Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease that reflect neuronal injury and vascular issues, with some changes appearing near symptom onset in asymptomatic carriers.
Contribution
The study provides a comprehensive analysis of peripheral biomarkers across multiple pathological dimensions in CJD and asymptomatic carriers.
Findings
Plasma NfL, t-tau, and GFAP showed strong elevation and excellent discriminative performance in symptomatic CJD.
VCAM-1 levels were elevated and associated with clinical decline and imaging changes in CJD.
Some asymptomatic carriers showed pre-symptomatic elevations in NfL, GFAP, and VCAM-1 near disease onset.
Abstract
Plasma markers of neuronal injury in Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (CJD) are established, but peripheral biomarkers reflecting glial activation, synaptic dysfunction, and vascular impairment remain less explored. We systematically assessed these markers in symptomatic CJD and asymptomatic PRNP mutation carriers to improve diagnosis and identify early pathophysiology. This prospective cohort study recruited CJD, frontotemporal dementia (FTD), healthy controls (HCs), and preclinical familial CJD pedigrees. Sixteen plasma proteins representing neuronal injury, glial activation, synaptic function, and vascular/BBB integrity were measured. Analyses included group differences, discriminative performance, clinical/imaging correlations, and longitudinal trajectories. We enrolled 130 CJD patients, 145 FTD, 70 HCs, 16 asymptomatic PRNP carriers (4–6 years follow‐up, 4 converters), and 16…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPrion Diseases and Protein Misfolding · Peripheral Neuropathies and Disorders · Biochemical effects in animals
