| Literature DB >> 22096631 |
Charlotte E Teunissen1, Hayrettin Tumani, Jeffrey L Bennett, Frode S Berven, Lou Brundin, Manuel Comabella, Diego Franciotta, Jette L Federiksen, John O Fleming, Roberto Furlan, Rogier Q Hintzen, Steve G Hughes, Connie R Jimenez, Michael H Johnson, Joep Killestein, Eva Krasulova, Jens Kuhle, Maria-Chiara Magnone, Axel Petzold, Cecilia Rajda, Konrad Rejdak, Hollie K Schmidt, Vincent van Pesch, Emmanuelle Waubant, Christian Wolf, Florian Deisenhammer, Gavin Giovannoni, Bernhard Hemmer.
Abstract
There is a long history of research into body fluid biomarkers in neurodegenerative and neuroinflammatory diseases. However, only a few biomarkers in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) are being used in clinical practice. Anti-aquaporin-4 antibodies in serum are currently useful for the diagnosis of neuromyelitis optica (NMO), but we could expect novel CSF biomarkers that help define prognosis and response to treatment for this disease. One of the most critical factors in biomarker research is the inadequate powering of studies performed by single centers. Collaboration between investigators is needed to establish large biobanks of well-defined samples. A key issue in collaboration is to establish standardized protocols for biobanking to ensure that the statistical power gained by increasing the numbers of CSF samples is not compromised by pre-analytical factors. Here, consensus guidelines for CSF collection and biobanking are presented, based on the guidelines that have been published by the BioMS-eu network for CSF biomarker research. We focussed on CSF collection procedures, pre-analytical factors and high quality clinical and paraclinical information. Importantly, the biobanking protocols are applicable for CSF biobanks for research targeting any neurological disease.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22096631 PMCID: PMC3195993 DOI: 10.1155/2011/246412
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mult Scler Int ISSN: 2090-2654
Figure 1Results of inventory of collection procedures among 14 European centers with CSF biobanks for MS research in 2006. (a) Other body fluids that are collected simultaneously with CSF. Filled area indicates “yes”; open areas: not collected. (b) Storage temperature of CSF and serum. Open area: −80; closed area: −20; grey area: not collected. (c) Average volume of CSF that is collected per patient per CSF withdrawal. Bars indicate the average and ranges of volume per center. (d) Time-delay between CSF withdrawal, spinning and storage into the freezer. Bars indicate the average and ranges of time per center.
Results of inventory on collection protocols among 14 MS Biomarker Research Centers.
| Procedure of CSF withdrawal | Previous status among European CSF centers |
|---|---|
| Type of needle: | 71% atraumatic, 21% traumatic, 8% both |
| Time of the day of withdrawal (important for markers that are sensitive for circadian rhythm) | 71% no specific day/time of withdrawal, 29% in the afternoon only |
| Temperature until storage | 57% room temperature, 43% at 4°C |
| Type of tube: | 50% Sarstedt, 29% Eppendorf, 21% other |
| aliquoting: | Range from 0.2 mL to 2 mL |
| (1) surveillance of freezers | Present at 93% of the centers |
| (2) several freezers to split the samples (backup) | Present at 14% of the centers |
Guidelines for procedure of CSF withdrawal.
| Item no. | Procedure | Ideal situation |
|---|---|---|
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| (1) | Preferred volume | At least 12 mL. First 1-2 mL for basic CSF assessment (item 26). Last 10 mL for biobanking. Record volume taken and fraction used for biobanking, if applicable. |
| (2) | Location | Vertebral body L3–L5 |
| (3) | If bloody | Do not process further. |
| Criteria for bloody: more than 500 red blood cells/ | ||
| Record number of blood cells in diagnostic samples. | ||
| (4) | Type of needle | Atraumatic |
| (5) | Type of collection tube | Polypropylene tubes, screw cap, volume >10 mL. |
| (6) | Time of day of withdrawal and storage | Preferably standardized within each center allowing for intercenter differences in local logistics. |
| Record date and time of collection. | ||
| (7) | Other body fluids that should be collected simultaneously | Serum |
| (8) | Other body fluids that should be collected simultaneously | Plasma: EDTA (preferred over citrate). |
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| (9) | Storage temperature until freezing | Room temperature before, during, and after spinning. |
| (10) | Spinning conditions | Serum: 2,000 g, 10 min at room temperature. |
| CSF: 400 g, 10 min at room temperature/2,000 g if no cells are to be preserved. | ||
| (11) | Time delay between withdrawal and spinning and freezing | Optimal for CSF: 1-2 hours |
| Optimal for serum: 30–60 min. | ||
| Thus doing “ | ||
| After spinning, samples must be aliquoted and frozen immediately for storage at −80 | ||
| (12) | Type of tube for aliquoting | Small polypropylene tubes (1 to 2 mL) with screw caps. Record manufacturer. |
| (13) | Aliquoting | A minimum of two aliquots is recommended. The advised research sample volume of 10 mL should be enough for >10 aliquots. |
| (14) | Volume of aliquots | Minimum 0.1 mL. Depending on total volume of tube: 0.2, 0.5, and 1 mL. Preferably, the tubes are filled up to 75%. |
| (15) | Coding | Unique codes. Freezing-proof labels. Ideally barcodes to facilitate searching, to aid in blinding the analysis and to protect the privacy of patients. |
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| (16) | Freezing temperature | −80 |
| (17) | Additional items on sample collection protocols that must be recorded | Location of samples |
| (18) | Additional items on sample collection protocols that must be recorded | Surveillance of freezers |
| (19) | Additional items on sample collection protocols that must be recorded | Splitting of samples over two or more freezers |
| (20) | Transport conditions | Always on dry-ice, sufficient volume of dry-ice for minimal 3 days of transport. |
| Initiated on Mondays. | ||
| Avoid high temperatures for thawing and mix thoroughly. | ||
Guidelines for patient information requirement in databases of MS patients.
| Item no. | (D) Patient information requirement in databases |
|---|---|
| (a) Basic demographics | |
| (21) | (1) date of birth (age if date of birth is not available) |
| (22) | (2) Gender |
| (23) | (3) Ethnicity |
| (24) | (4) Use of drugs, at sampling and year before sampling. |
| (25) | (5) Actual nonneuronal infections, fasting or nonfasting, pregnancy. |
| (26) | (6) Basic CSF analysis (CSF cell count, differential cytology, erythrocyte count, oligoclonal IgG bands (which is at least two bands by definition), albumin ratio, total protein (if albumin is not measured), and IgG index) |
| (7) Record the methods of routine analysis | |
| (27) | (8) The data in the CSF database should be in English and use Standardized International Units |