4.6 Article

Alzheimer's disease cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers are not influenced by gravity drip or aspiration extraction methodology

Journal

ALZHEIMERS RESEARCH & THERAPY
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
DOI: 10.1186/s13195-015-0157-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Merck International
  2. Science Industry and Endowment Fund
  3. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) via the Dementia Collaborative Research Centres program (DCRC)
  4. Victorian government's Operational Infrastructure Support program, Alzheimer's Australia (Victoria and Western Australia)
  5. NHMRC Practitioner Fellowship [APP1005816]
  6. CSIRO

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Introduction: Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) biomarkers, although of established utility in the diagnostic evaluation of Alzheimer's disease (AD), are known to be sensitive to variation based on pre-analytical sample processing. We assessed whether gravity droplet collection versus syringe aspiration was another factor influencing CSF biomarker analyte concentrations and reproducibility. Methods: Standardized lumbar puncture using small calibre atraumatic spinal needles and CSF collection using gravity fed collection followed by syringe aspirated extraction was performed in a sample of elderly individuals participating in a large long-term observational research trial. Analyte assay concentrations were compared. Results: For the 44 total paired samples of gravity collection and aspiration, reproducibility was high for biomarker CSF analyte assay concentrations (concordance correlation [95% C]: beta-amyloidl-42 (A[42) 0.83 [0.71-0.90]), t-tau 0.99 [0.98-0.991, and phosphorylated tau (p-tau) 0.82 [95 % CI 0.71-0.89]) and Bonferroni corrected paired sample t-tests showed no significant differences (group means (SD): A beta 42 366.5 (86.8) vs 354.3 (82.6), p=0.10; t-tau 83.9 (46.6) vs 84.7 (47.4) p = 0.49; p-tau 43.5 (22.8) vs 40.0 (17.7), p = 0.05). The mean duration of collection was 10.9 minutes for gravity collection and < 1 minute for aspiration. Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that aspiration of CSF is comparable to gravity droplet collection for AD biomarker analyses but could considerably accelerate throughput and improve the procedural tolerability for assessment of CSF biomarkers.

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