4.7 Article

Peripheral inflammatory markers and clinical correlations in patients with frontotemporal lobar degeneration with and without the C9orf72 repeat expansion

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY
Volume 267, Issue 1, Pages 76-86

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00415-019-09552-1

Keywords

Frontotemporal lobar degeneration; Frontotemporal dementia; Parkinsonism; Disease progression; C9orf72; Inflammation; Cytokines

Funding

  1. University of Eastern Finland (UEF)
  2. Kuopio University Hospital
  3. Academy of Finland [315459, 315460]
  4. VTR Grant of Kuopio University Hospital [5772816]
  5. Finnish Brain Foundation
  6. Finnish Medical Foundation
  7. Paivikki and Sakari Sohlberg Foundation
  8. Finnish Alzheimer's Disease Research Society
  9. Maire Taponen Foundation
  10. Finnish Cultural Foundation
  11. OLVI-foundation
  12. Maud Kuistila Memorial Foundation
  13. Yrjo Jahnsson Foundation [20187070]

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In this study, our aim was to evaluate potential peripheral inflammatory changes in frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) patients carrying or not the C9orf72 repeat expansion. To this end, levels of several inflammatory markers (MCP-1, RANTES, IL-10, IL-17A, IL-12p, IFN-., IL-1 beta, IL-8, and hs-CRP) and blood cells counts in plasma and/or serum of FTLD patients (N = 98) with or without the C9orf72 repeat expansion were analyzed. In addition, we evaluated whether the analyzed peripheral inflammatory markers correlated with disease progression or distinct clinical phenotypes under the heterogenous FTLD spectrum. Elevated levels of pro-inflammatory RANTES or MCP-1 and decreased levels of anti-inflammatory IL-10 were found to associate with Parkinsonism and a more rapid disease progression, indicated by longitudinal measurements of either MMSE or ADCS-ADL decline. These findings were observed in the total cohort in general, whereas the C9orf72 repeat expansion carriers showed only slight differences in IL-10 and hemoglobin levels compared to non-carriers. Furthermore, these C9orf72 repeat expansion-associated differences were observed mostly in male subjects. The females in general showed elevated levels of several pro-inflammatory markers compared to males regardless of the C9orf72 genotype. Our study suggests that pro-inflammatory changes observed in the early symptomatic phase of FTLD are associated with distinct clinical profiles and a more rapid disease progression, and that the C9orf72 repeat expansion and gender may also affect the inflammatory profile in FTLD.

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