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Alpha-synuclein seeds in olfactory mucosa and cerebrospinal fluid of patients with dementia with Lewy bodies
Author(s) -
Daniela Perra,
Matilde Bongianni,
Giovanni Novi,
Francesco Janes,
Valentina Bessi,
Stefano Capaldi,
Luca Sacchetto,
Matteo Tagliapietra,
G. Sche,
Silvia Morbelli,
Michele Fiorini,
Tatiana Cattaruzza,
Giulia Mazzon,
Christina D. Orrú,
Mauro Catalan,
Paola Polverino,
Andrea Bernardini,
Gaia Pellitteri,
Mariarosa Valente,
Claudio Bertolotti,
Benedetta Nacmias,
Giandomenico Maggiore,
Tiziana Cavallaro,
Paolo Manganotti,
Gian Luigi Gigli,
Salvatore Monaco,
Flavio Nobili,
Gianluigi Zanusso
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
brain communications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2632-1297
DOI - 10.1093/braincomms/fcab045
Subject(s) - dementia with lewy bodies , alpha synuclein , olfactory mucosa , dementia , cerebrospinal fluid , parkinson's disease , pathology , disease , lewy body , medicine , clinical trial , olfactory system , neuroscience , biology
In patients with suspected dementia with Lewy bodies, the detection of the disease-associated α-synuclein in easily accessible tissues amenable to be collected using minimally invasive procedures remains a major diagnostic challenge. This approach has the potential to take advantage of modern molecular assays for the diagnosis of α–synucleinopathy and, in turn, to optimize the recruitment and selection of patients in clinical trials, using drugs directed at counteracting α-synuclein aggregation. In this study, we explored the diagnostic accuracy of α-synuclein real-time quaking-induced conversion assay by testing olfactory mucosa and CSF in patients with a clinical diagnosis of probable ( n  = 32) or prodromal ( n  = 5) dementia with Lewy bodies or mixed degenerative dementia (dementia with Lewy bodies/Alzheimer’s disease) ( n  = 6). Thirty-eight patients with non-α-synuclein-related neurodegenerative and non-neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer’s disease ( n  = 10), sporadic Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease ( n  = 10), progressive supranuclear palsy ( n  = 8), corticobasal syndrome ( n  = 1), fronto-temporal dementia ( n  = 3) and other neurological conditions ( n  = 6) were also included, as controls. All 81 patients underwent olfactory swabbing while CSF was obtained in 48 participants. At the initial blinded screening of olfactory mucosa samples, 38 out of 81 resulted positive while CSF was positive in 19 samples out of 48 analysed. After unblinding of the results, 27 positive olfactory mucosa were assigned to patients with probable dementia with Lewy bodies, five with prodromal dementia with Lewy bodies and three to patients with mixed dementia, as opposed to three out 38 controls. Corresponding results of CSF testing disclosed 10 out 10 positive samples in patients with probable dementia with Lewy bodies and six out of six with mixed dementia, in addition to three out of 32 for controls. The accuracy among results of real-time quaking-induced conversion assays and clinical diagnoses was 86.4% in the case of olfactory mucosa and 93.8% for CSF. For the first time, we showed that α-synuclein real-time quaking-induced conversion assay detects α-synuclein aggregates in olfactory mucosa of patients with dementia with Lewy bodies and with mixed dementia. Additionally, we provided preliminary evidence that the combined testing of olfactory mucosa and CSF raised the concordance with clinical diagnosis potentially to 100%. Our results suggest that nasal swabbing might be considered as a first-line screening procedure in patients with a diagnosis of suspected dementia with Lewy bodies followed by CSF analysis, as a confirmatory test, when the result in the olfactory mucosa is incongruent with the initial clinical diagnosis.

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