| Literature DB >> 23401777 |
Serafeim Katsavos1, Maria Anagnostouli.
Abstract
During the last decades, the effort of establishing satisfactory biomarkers for multiple sclerosis has been proven to be very difficult, due to the clinical and pathophysiological complexities of the disease. Recent knowledge acquired in the domains of genomics-immunogenetics and neuroimmunology, as well as the evolution in neuroimaging, has provided a whole new list of biomarkers. This variety, though, leads inevitably to confusion in the effort of decision making concerning strategic and individualized therapeutics. In this paper, our primary goal is to provide the reader with a list of the most important characteristics that a biomarker must possess in order to be considered as reliable. Additionally, up-to-date biomarkers are further divided into three subgroups, genetic-immunogenetic, laboratorial, and imaging. The most important representatives of each category are presented in the text and for the first time in a summarizing workable table, in a critical way, estimating their diagnostic potential and their efficacy to correlate with phenotypical expression, neuroinflammation, neurodegeneration, disability, and therapeutical response. Special attention is given to the "gold standards" of each category, like HLA-DRB1∗ polymorphisms, oligoclonal bands, vitamin D, and conventional and nonconventional imaging techniques. Moreover, not adequately established but quite promising, recently characterized biomarkers, like TOB-1 polymorphisms, are further discussed.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23401777 PMCID: PMC3564381 DOI: 10.1155/2013/340508
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mult Scler Int ISSN: 2090-2654
Biomarkers in MS.
| (A) Diagnostic biomarkers (criteria i, iv, v, and vi) | ||
|---|---|---|
| (1) Genetic-immunogenetic | ||
| HLA-DRB1*1501 | +++ Risk for MS | See also B, E |
| DR3 and DR4 haplotypes | ++ Risk for MS | |
| HLA-DRB1*04 | ++ Risk for MS | |
| HLA-DRB1*0401 | + Risk for high familial autoimmunity in MS patients | See also F |
| HLA-DQ1*0102 | + Risk for MS, in coexistence with HLA-DRB1*1501 | |
| HLA-DPB1*0501 | + Risk for opticospinal MS | |
| HLA-DPB1*0301 | + Risk for opticospinal MS | |
| IL2RA and IL7RA polymorphisms | + Risk for MS | |
| EVI5, CD58, KIAA0350, and RPL5 polymorphisms | +/− Risk for MS | |
| (2) Laboratorial | ||
| OCB IgG | +++ But with low specificity | See also E |
| KFLC | +++ But with low specificity | See also E |
| MRZ reaction | +++ Higher specificity than OCB IgG | See also E, F |
| Anti BRRF2, anti EBNA-1 | ++ | See also B, C |
| Anti MBP 48–70 and 85–170 | + | See also B, E |
| Anti MBP 43–68 and 146–170 | + Differential diagnosis with OND's | See also B, E |
| MBP/MOG conformational epitopes antibodies | + But low specificity | See also B, E, F |
| VEGF-A | + Lower CSF levels in all disease forms, but low specificity | See also D, E |
| Vitamin D | +++ Lower levels, higher risk for MS | See also C, F |
| TRECs | + Lower serum levels in all disease forms, but low specificity | See also B |
| CSF levels of lipocalin 2 | + Higher CSF levels in MS, but low specificity | See also F |
| AR | +++ Differential diagnosis of MS and NMO | See also C, E |
| NO and NO metabolites | + Higher CSF and serum levels in MS, but low specificity | See also C, E |
| NF-L | ++ Higher CSF levels in MS patients | See also C, F |
| NAA | +++ Differential diagnosis of RRMS and NMO | See also D, E |
| GFAP | +++ Differential diagnosis of MS and NMO | See also C, E |
| S100B | + Differential diagnosis of MS and NMO | See also C, E |
| Nogo-A | ++ For MS forms with prominent neurodegenerative element | See also D |
| (3) Imaging | ||
| Contrast-enhanced T1 lesions | +++ | See also C |
| Hyperintense T2-weighted lesions | +++ | See also C, D, E |
| Corpus callosum DTI abnormalities | ++ Early diagnostic biomarker | See also E |
| MRS findings (glutamate/choline) | +++ | See also C, D, E |
| PET | ++ But still experimental | |
| EPs | +++ | See also C, |
| SSR | ++ Autonomic dysfunction assessment in MS patients | See also E |
|
| ||
| (B) Biomarkers of phenotypical expression (criteria ii, iv, v, and vi) | ||
|
| ||
| (1) Genetic-immunogenetic | ||
| HLA-DRB1*1501 | +++ Early disease onset | See also A, E |
| HLA-DRB1*1501 | + Risk for cognitive decline | |
| HLA-DRB1*01 | ++ Protection against malignant disease form | |
| ApoE | ++ Greater risk for mental disorders | |
| (2) Laboratorial | ||
| OCB IgM against myelin lipids | +/− Aggressive disease course | See also E |
| EBV antibodies | + Early disease onset | See also A, C |
| Anti-MBP | +++ ADEM-like onset in childhood MS | See also A, E |
| Anti-MOG | +++ Childhood MS, ADEM, isolated optic neuritis, anti-AQP4 (−) NMO | See also A, E, F |
| rMOG index | +++ Progressive disease forms | |
| IL-6 serum levels | +++ Age at onset | See also C |
| TRECs | ++ Lower levels PPMS | See also A |
| Amyloid- | ++ Lower levels, higher risk for mental disorders | |
| (3) Imaging | ||
| UCCA atrophy | +++ Progressive disease forms | See also E |
| NAGM DTI abnormalities | +++ Progressive disease forms | |
|
| ||
| (C) Biomarkers of demyelination-neuroinflammation-relapse (criteria i, ii, iii, iv, v, and vi) | ||
|
| ||
| (1) Genetic-immunogenetic | ||
| TOB1 | +++ Underexpression, higher Th1 and Th17 percentage | See also E |
| (2) Laboratorial | ||
| EBV antibodies | + Higher inflammatory activity | See also A, B |
| CXCL13 | ++ Mobilizes B-cells, T-helper cells | |
| CXCL12 | +/− Neuroprotection against inflammation in EAE/ experimental | |
| IFN- | +++ Th1 immune response | |
| IL-1 levels imbalance | + Triggering factor for neuroinflammation | |
| IL-6 | +++ B-cell and T-cell immunity link, Th17 immune response triggering factor | See also B |
| IL-10 −592 position polymorphisms | ++ Regulation of CNS autoimmunity | |
| IL-15 | ++ BBB disruption, enhanced CD8(+) T cytotoxicity | |
| IL-33 | + Increase in IFN- | |
| sICAM-1 | ++ Higher levels, higher inflammatory activity | See also F |
| sVCAM-1 | +++ Higher levels in NMO than MS—marker of BBB disruption | See also F |
| Laminin 411 | ++ TH-17 enhancement | |
|
| ++ Correlation with gadolinium-enhanced lesions during CIS | See also E, F |
| Osteopontin | ++ Serum and CSF elevation during relapse | |
| Fetuin-A | +++ Overexpression in active demyelinating lesions | See also F |
| Vitamin D | +++ High levels, anti-inflammatory role—lower radiological disease activity | See also A, F |
| CSF mature B-cells/plasma-blasts | ++ Bigger accumulation, higher inflammatory activity | |
| CXCR3 | ++ Helps T-cells to enter the brain | |
| CX(3)CR1 | ++ CD4(+)CD28(−) cytotoxic cells biomarker | |
| CSF CCR2(+)CCR5(+) T cells | +++ Increase during MS relapse—osteopontin enhancement | |
| CD56 Bright NK | ++ Remission phase | |
| AR | +++ Biomarker of BBB disruption | See also A, E |
| MMP-9 | ++ Higher CSF levels during relapse | |
| Ninjurin-1 | ++ Upregulation in active demyelinating lesions | |
| MBP and fragments | +++ Higher CSF levels during relapse | See also F |
|
| +++ Over-expression in active demyelinating lesions | |
| NO and metabolites | ++ | See also A, E |
| 7-Ketocholesterol | ++ | |
| Glutamate | +++ Higher levels in active demyelinating lesions | |
| Cystine/glutamate antiporter | + Over-expression in active demyelinating lesions | |
| NF-L | +++ Higher CSF levels, especially the 3rd week after relapse onset | See also A, F |
| GFAP | ++ Higher levels during relapse | See also A, E |
| S100B | +/− Higher CSF levels during MS/NMO relapse | See also A, E |
| N-CAM | + CSF elevation at remission onset | |
| BDNF | ++ Lower levels inhibit demyelination and axonal loss | See also D, E, F |
| (3) Imaging | ||
| Contrast-enhanced T1 lesions | +++ Active lesions | See also A |
| Hyperintense T2-weighted lesions | ++ Combination of different mechanisms | See also A, D, E |
| MTR decrease | + Demyelination and axonal loss combined | See also D |
| DTI abnormalities | ++ Combination of different mechanisms | See also D, E |
| MRS findings (especially changes in glutamate and choline) | +++ Active lesions | See also A, D, E |
| DTS | ++ Promising but still experimental | See also D |
| EP's delayed conduction | ++ Demyelination biomarker | See also A, D, E |
|
| ||
| (D) Biomarkers of axonal loss-neurodegeneration (criteria i, iv, v, and vi) | ||
|
| ||
| (1) Laboratorial | ||
| VEGF-A | ++ Lower levels, higher risk for neurodegeneration | See also A, E |
| 14-3-3 | +/− Axonal loss | |
| NAA | +++ Axonal loss | See also A, E |
| BDNF | ++ Lower levels inhibit demyelination and axonal loss | See also C, E, F |
| Nogo-A | +++ Higher CSF levels, failure in axonal repair | See also A |
| (2) Imaging | ||
| RNFL thinning | +++ Axonal loss in the optic nerve | See also E, F |
| Hyperintense T2-weighted lesions | ++ Combination of different mechanisms | See also A, C, E |
| Black holes | +++ Axonal loss | See also E |
| MTR decrease | ++ Demyelination and axonal loss combined | See also C |
| DTI abnormalities | ++ Combination of different mechanisms | See also C, E |
| MRS findings (especially NAA) | ++ | See also A, C, E |
| DTS | +++ Promising but still not widely accessible | See also C |
| Visual and motor EPs | ++ | See also A, C, D |
|
| ||
| (E) Prognostic biomarkers—biomarkers of disability progression (criteria ii, iv, v, vi, and viii) | ||
|
| ||
| (1) Genetic-immunogenetic | ||
| HLA-DRB1*1501 | +/− Early progression from RRMS to SPMS | See also A, B |
| HLA-DRB1*1501 | + Worst brain atrophy measures | |
| HLA-DQB1*0301 | + Worst brain atrophy measures | |
| HLA-DQB1*0602 | + Worst whole and gray matter atrophy measures | |
| TOB1 | +++ Early conversion from CIS to CDMS | See also C |
| (2) Laboratorial | ||
| OCB IgG | +++ Conversion from CIS to CDMS | See also A |
| KFLC | +++ Conversion from CIS to CDMS | See also A |
| OCB IgM | +/− Bad prognostic biomarker | See also B |
| MRZ reaction | +++ Conversion from CIS to CDMS | See also A, F |
| Anti-MBP | +/− Conversion from CIS to CDMS | See also A, B |
| Anti-MOG | +/− Conversion from CIS to CDMS | See also A, B, F |
| AR | ++ Marker of clinical severity in NMO | See also A, C |
| VEGF-A | ++ Lower levels, progression from RRMS to SPMS | See also A, D |
| NO and NO metabolites | ++ Higher CSF levels, longer relapses/higher disability progression rates | See also A, C |
| NF-H | +++ Higher CSF levels, progressive forms/bad prognostic biomarker | |
| NF-H and tau | +++ Combined high CSF levels, conversion from CIS to CDMS | |
| Tubulin/actin | ++ Higher CSF levels, progressive forms/worst disability scores | |
| NAA | +++ Lower CSF levels, progressive forms/worst disability scores | See also A, D |
| GFAP | ++ Higher CSF levels, progressive MS forms/worst disability scores | See also A,C |
| S100B | + Disability progression in NMO | See also A,C |
| BDNF | ++ Lower CSF levels in SPMS patients | See also C, D, F |
| Unblocked | + Prognostic factor of risk for PML | See also C, F |
| (3) Imaging | ||
| RNFL thinning | + Correlation with brain atrophy measures and disease progression | See also D, F |
| Hyperintense T2-weighted lesions | +/− | See also A, C, D |
| Black holes | +/− | See also D |
| Whole brain atrophy measures | ++ Worsening rates at MS onset, prognostic biomarker of disability after 8 years | |
| Gray matter atrophy measures | +++ Higher worsening rates, progressive forms/early CIS conversion to RRMS | |
| UCCA atrophy | ++ Progressive forms, good correlation with EDSS, bad prognostic in RRMS | See also B |
| DTI abnormalities | +++ Early prognostic biomarker of relapse | See also C, D |
| Corpus callosum DTI abnormalities | +++ Bad prognostic biomarker | See also A |
| Spinal cord DTI abnormalities | +++ Good correlation with EDSS scores | |
| Early MRS abnormalities | ++ Bad prognostic biomarker | See also A, C, D |
| Combined EPs | +++ Good prognostic biomarker, especially for benign disease forms | See also A, C, D |
| SSR | ++ Correlation with higher EDSS scores | See also A |
|
| ||
| (F) Biomarkers of therapeutical response (criteria i, iv, v, vi, and vii) | ||
|
| ||
| (1) Genetic-immunogenetic | ||
| HLA-DRB1*0401, 0408, 1601 | +++ Higher risk for developing neutralizing antibodies against IFN-B | See also A |
| (2) Laboratorial | ||
| MRZ reaction | ++ B-cell immunity targeted therapy | See also A, E |
| Anti-MOG | ++ B-cell immunity targeted therapy | See also A, B, E |
| Fetuin-A | +++ Decreased CSF levels in Natalizumab responders | See also C |
| MBP | +++ Decrease in CSF levels in methylprednizolone responders | See also C |
| CSF lipocalin 2 | ++ Decreased CSF levels in Natalizumab responders | See also A |
| Unblocked | +++ Therapeutical response to Natalizumab | See also C, E |
| NF-L | +++ Normalized CSF levels in Natalizumab responders | See also A, C |
| BDNF | +++ CSF elevation in Glatiramer Acetate responders | See also C, D, E |
| TRAIL | ++ Serum levels good predictors of response in IFN-B | |
| MxA | ++ Serum levels good predictors of response in IFN-B | |
| sVCAM | ++ CSF alterations in IFN-B responders | See also C |
| Th17 immune profil | +/− Immune response exacerbation by IFN-B | |
| Vitamin D | +++ Increased levels in IFN-B responders | See also A, C |
| sICAM-1 | + Lower levels in Cladribine responders | See also C |
| sE-Selectin | + Lower levels in Cladribine responders | |
| (3) Imaging | ||
| RNFL | +++ Biomarker of therapeutical efficacy for several agents | See also D, E |
Classification of biomarkers. +++ very strong correlation, ++ strong correlation, + modest correlation, and +/− controversial correlation. Criteria used for classification., (i) Biological rationale; (ii) clinical rationale; (iii) predictability of disease initiation, reactivation or progression, or of disease differentiation; (iv) sensitivity and specificity; (v) reproducibility; (vi) practicality; (vii) correlation with therapeutical outcome; (viii) correlation with prognosis and disability. Biomarkers of more than one category are indicated in the third column.