MRC Prion Unit, Department of Neurodegenerative Disease, University College London Institute of Neurology, London, England.
Dementia Research Centre, Department of Neurodegenerative Disease, University College London Institute of Neurology, London, England.
JAMA Neurol. 2016 Dec 1;73(12):1454-1460. doi: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2016.3733.
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is a fatal neurodegenerative disorder associated with the accumulation of infectious abnormal prion protein through a mechanism of templated misfolding. A recent report has described the detection of abnormal prion protein in the urine of patients with variant CJD (vCJD) using protein misfolding by cyclic amplification, which was apparently absent in the more common sporadic form of CJD (sCJD). A noninvasive diagnostic test could improve early diagnosis of sCJD and, by screening donations, mitigate the potential risks of prion transmission through human urine-derived pharmaceuticals. Here, we describe the adaptation of the direct detection assay, developed originally as a blood test for vCJD, for the detection of disease-associated prion protein in urine samples from patients with sCJD.
To determine the feasibility of sCJD diagnosis by adaptation of an established vCJD diagnostic blood test to urine.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This retrospective, cross-sectional study included anonymized urine samples from healthy nonneurological control individuals (n = 91), patients with non-prion neurodegenerative diseases (n = 34), and patients with prion disease (n = 37) of which 20 had sCJD. Urine samples obtained during the Medical Research Council PRION-1 Trial, the National Prion Monitoring Cohort Study, and/or referred to the National Prion Clinic or Dementia Research Centre at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery in the United Kingdom.
Presence of sCJD infection determined by an assay that captures, enriches, and detects disease-associated prion protein isoforms.
A total of 162 samples were analyzed, composed of 91 normal control individuals (51 male, 33 female, and 7 not recorded), 34 neurological disease control individuals (19 male and 15 female), and 37 with prion disease (22 male and 15 female). The assay's specificity for prion disease was 100% (95% CI, 97%-100%), with no false-positive reactions from 125 control individuals, including 34 from a range of neurodegenerative diseases. In contrast to a previous study, which used a different method, sensitivity to vCJD infection was low (7.7%; 95% CI, 0.2%-36%), with only 1 of 13 patients with positive test results, while sensitivity to sCJD was unexpectedly high at 40% (95% CI, 19%-64%).
We determined 40% of sCJD urine sample results as positive. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of an assay that can detect sCJD infection in urine or any target analyte outside of the central nervous system. Urine detection could allow the development of rapid, molecular diagnostics for sCJD and has implications for other neurodegenerative diseases where disease-related assemblies of misfolded proteins might also be present in urine.
克雅氏病(CJD)是一种致命的神经退行性疾病,与传染性异常朊病毒蛋白的积累有关,这种蛋白通过模板错误折叠的机制积累。最近的一份报告描述了使用循环扩增的蛋白质错误折叠检测变异克雅氏病(vCJD)患者尿液中的异常朊病毒蛋白,而这种方法显然不存在于更为常见的散发性克雅氏病(sCJD)中。非侵入性诊断测试可以提高 sCJD 的早期诊断,并且通过对捐赠物进行筛查,可以减轻通过人尿液衍生药物传播朊病毒的潜在风险。在这里,我们描述了一种最初开发用于检测 vCJD 的血液检测的直接检测方法的适应性,用于检测 sCJD 患者尿液样本中的疾病相关朊病毒蛋白。
确定通过适应性建立的用于检测 vCJD 的血液检测来诊断 sCJD 的可行性。
设计、设置和参与者:这是一项回顾性、横断面研究,包括来自健康非神经科对照组个体(n=91)、非朊病毒神经退行性疾病患者(n=34)和朊病毒病患者(n=37)的匿名尿液样本,其中 20 例为 sCJD。尿液样本来自英国国家神经病学和神经外科学院国家医院的医学研究委员会 PRION-1 试验、国家朊病毒监测队列研究以及/或转介至国家朊病毒诊所或痴呆症研究中心。
通过捕获、富集和检测疾病相关朊病毒蛋白异构体的检测确定 sCJD 感染的存在。
共分析了 162 个样本,由 91 名正常对照组个体(51 名男性,33 名女性,7 名未记录)、34 名神经科疾病对照组个体(19 名男性和 15 名女性)和 37 名朊病毒病患者(22 名男性和 15 名女性)组成。该检测对朊病毒病的特异性为 100%(95%CI,97%-100%),125 名对照组个体中无一例出现假阳性反应,其中包括来自各种神经退行性疾病的 34 名个体。与之前使用不同方法的研究相比,该检测对 vCJD 感染的敏感性较低(7.7%;95%CI,0.2%-36%),仅 13 名阳性检测结果的患者中,1 名患者呈阳性,而对 sCJD 的敏感性出人意料地高,为 40%(95%CI,19%-64%)。
我们确定了 40%的 sCJD 尿液样本结果为阳性。据我们所知,这是首次证明可以在尿液或中枢神经系统以外的任何靶标分析物中检测到 sCJD 感染的检测方法。尿液检测可以为 sCJD 开发快速、分子诊断方法,并对其他可能存在错误折叠蛋白质疾病相关聚集物的神经退行性疾病具有重要意义。