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http://dx.doi.org/10.25673/122526| Title: | Longitudinal changes of blood β-synuclein in cognitively unimpaired, mild cognitive impairment and sporadic Alzheimer´s disease |
| Author(s): | Oeckl, Patrick Abu Rumeileh, Samir Weise, Christopher Michael Otto, Markus |
| Issue Date: | 2026 |
| Type: | Article |
| Language: | English |
| Abstract: | Background β-Synuclein is an emerging synaptic blood biomarker for Alzheimer´s disease (AD) and correlates with cognitive impairment, brain atrophy and amyloid/tau pathology. Longitudinal data from individual patients are missing so far but are important to evaluate how changes of β-synuclein might be used in early diagnosis, prediction, disease progression and treatment monitoring. Methods In this observational study, we investigated serum β-synuclein by immunoprecipitation-mass spectrometry (IP-MS) in 463 participants from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) including clinically diagnosed cognitively unimpaired, mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and AD dementia subjects with ≥ 1 follow-up samples for 235 individuals and clinical follow-up for up to 19 years. CSF AD biomarker levels were available for 194 participants. Results Participants (40.0% female, n = 185) had a mean (± SD) age of 76.2 ± 6.7 years. The cross-sectional group comparison yielded higher β-synuclein levels in MCI and AD dementia compared with CU and in AD dementia vs MCI patients. Mean follow-up time of longitudinal serum samples was 2.3 ± 1.2 years. The longitudinal data indicate that β-synuclein levels are dynamic during all stages of the AD continuum (CU, MCI, dementia) with substantial inter-individual variation. β-Synuclein predicted MCI-to-dementia conversion and future cognitive decline and it performed better in discrimination of AD dementia patients than CSF neurogranin. Conclusions Our longitudinal data support the use of serum β-synuclein levels for prediction of future cognitive decline and MCI-to-dementia conversion but needing confirmation. Further studies with biologically and clinically defined participants must verify the trajectories of β-synuclein during the AD continuum. |
| URI: | https://opendata.uni-halle.de//handle/1981185920/124472 http://dx.doi.org/10.25673/122526 |
| Open Access: | Open access publication |
| License: | (CC BY 4.0) Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 |
| Journal Title: | Alzheimer's research & therapy |
| Publisher: | BioMed Central |
| Publisher Place: | London |
| Volume: | 18 |
| Original Publication: | 10.1186/s13195-026-01973-1 |
| Page Start: | 1 |
| Page End: | 11 |
| Appears in Collections: | Open Access Publikationen der MLU |
Files in This Item:
| File | Size | Format | |
|---|---|---|---|
| s13195-026-01973-1.pdf | 1.98 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
Open access publication