Toward clinical implementation of a metabolic blood biomarker for Parkinson's disease differential diagnosis
Millasseau, V.; Mallet, D.; Carnicella, S.; Barbier, E. L.; Sauvee, M.; Le Gouellec, A.; Cannet, C.; Pompe, N.; Boulet, S.; Fauvelle, F.
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Background. Parkinson's disease (PD) diagnosis remains delayed and suboptimally accurate, largely due to clinical overlap with atypical parkinsonian syndromes and the lack of reliable biomarkers. Here, we evaluated the performance of a previously patented 6-metabolites blood biomarker (6M-BB) for the differential diagnosis of PD and its translation to clinical IVDr NMR platform. Methods. Patient serum samples from de novo PD (n=30), multiple system atrophy (MSA, n=30), progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP, n=30), Alzheimer's disease (AD, n=33), and healthy individuals (n=29), were profiled by 1H NMR and classified using the 6M-BB. For clinical use, we rebuilt the model on absolute concentrations acquired on a Bruker Avance IVDr 600 MHz system. Results. The 6M-BB validation yielded 0.902 AUC and 87.9% accuracy for PD vs. HC (sensitivity 86.7%, specificity 89.3%), with an overall accuracy of 82.6% across all groups. The IVDr-based refit achieved 0.878 AUC (overall accuracy 77%). Adding VLDL-5 free cholesterol (V5FC) and citrate markedly improved performance to 0.959 AUC, with 94.9% accuracy for PD vs. HC (sensitivity 96.7%, specificity 93.1%) and 84.9% when MSA/PSP were included. Conclusion. The externally validated 6M-BB has demonstrated its robustness for the differential diagnosis of PD compared to other parkinsonian syndromes at de novo stage. Its successful transfer to a fully automated, standardized IVDr machine, with gains from V5FC and citrate, supports the feasibility and promising potential for clinical implementation, justifying future prospective multicenter studies.
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