Litcius/Paper detail

GFAP and NfL as predictors of disease progression and relapse activity in fingolimod-treated multiple sclerosis

Aleksandra Maleska Maceski, Pascal Benkert, Maximilian Einsiedler, Sabine Schädelin, Johanna Oechtering, Lester Melie‐García, Alessandro Cagol, Riccardo Galbusera, Edoardo Galli, Jannis Müller, Sebastian Finkener, Patrice H. Lalive, Marjolaine Uginet, Jannis Müller, Caroline Pot, Amandine Mathias, Renaud Du Pasquier, Robert Hoepner, Andrew Chan, Giulio Disanto, Chiara Zecca, Marcus D’Souza, Lars G. Hemkens, Özgür Yaldizli, Tobias Derfuss, Patrick Roth, Claudio Gobbi, David Brassat, Björn Tackenberg, Rosetta Pedotti, Catarina Raposo, Jorge R. Oksenberg, Ari Green, Heinz Wiendl, Klaus Berger, Marco Hermesdorf, Fredrik Piehl, David Conen, Ludwig Kappos, Michael Khalil, Cristina Granziera, Ahmed Abdelhak, David Leppert, Eline A.J. Willemse, Jens Kühle, for the Swiss Multiple Sclerosis Cohort (SMSC), Amar Zadic, Juan Gómez, Suvitha Subramaniam, Mauricio Rodríguez, Lilian Demuth, Annette Orleth

2025Brain9 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In multiple sclerosis (MS) patients under therapy, the increase of serum glial fibrillary acidic protein (sGFAP) concentrations is associated with the course of 'progression in absence of relapse' (PIRA). While serum neurofilament light chain (sNfL) reflects both response as well as insufficient or lack of efficiency of disease modifying therapies (DMT), the longitudinal course of sGFAP levels as drug response marker for future PIRA in relation to specific types of DMT is less clear. We aimed to compare the predictive capacity of sGFAP and sNfL for PIRA and relapse activity and the longitudinal course in persons with MS (PwMS) treated with fingolimod, based on Z scores derived from normative values. 420 PwMS under fingolimod treatment with follow-up of 9.1 years (IQR: 7.0-11.0) from the Swiss MS Cohort, contributing 2935 longitudinal serum samples, were included. A reference data set for sGFAP established from 4297 healthy controls across three European and North American cohorts was used to calculate Z scores. The longitudinal course and the predictive capacity of biomarkers for time to PIRA and relapse were assessed by Cox proportional hazards and linear mixed-effects models. In controls, sGFAP concentrations were 13.6% higher in females than males and increased exponentially with age. 31.0% of PwMS experienced ≥1 PIRA event. Elevated sGFAP Z scores (>0.75) were associated with increased risk of PIRA (HR: 1.64; 95% CI: [1.16-2.32]; p=0.006), while this was not the case for sNfL. Conversely, elevated sNfL predicted relapses (HR: 1.58 [1.13-2.23]; p=0.008), while sGFAP did not. Both biomarkers decreased under treatment: sGFAP by 0.19 Z score units (ZSU)/10 years (95% CI: -0.27 - -0.11; p<0.001) and sNfL by 0.16 ZSU/10 years (95% CI: -0.27 - -0.06; p=0.002). sGFAP remained elevated in PwMS with future PIRA events (estimate: 0.29; [0.07-0.50]; p=0.009); no such association was found for sNfL. sGFAP and sNfL Z scores provide complementary predictive capacity for PIRA and relapse risk. The decrease of sGFAP under fingolimod is a feature not observed with other types of DMT and may hint to a specific anti-neurodegenerative effect of Sphingosine-1-phosphate-receptor modulators on astrocytes.

Topics & Concepts

Multiple sclerosisMedicineFingolimodProportional hazards modelInternal medicineOncologyLongitudinal studyGlial fibrillary acidic proteinCohortDiseaseBiomarkerImmunologyLongitudinal dataDrugNatalizumabCentral nervous system diseaseYoung adultDosingBlockadeAmyotrophic lateral sclerosisMultiple Sclerosis Research StudiesNeurogenesis and neuroplasticity mechanismsAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Research
GFAP and NfL as predictors of disease progression and relapse activity in fingolimod-treated multiple sclerosis | Litcius