Evidence that minocycline treatment confounds the interpretation of neurofilament as a biomarker

Author:

Gentile Juliana EORCID,Heiss Christina,Corridon Taylor L,Mortberg Meredith A,Fruhwürth Stefanie,Guzman Kenia,Grötschel Lana,Chan Kwan,Herring Neil C,Janicki Timothy,Nhass Rajaa,Sarathy Janani Manavala,Erickson Brian,Kunz Ryan,Erickson Alison,Braun Craig,Henry Katherine T,Bry LynnORCID,Arnold Steven EORCID,Minikel Eric VallabhORCID,Zetterberg Henrik,Vallabh Sonia MORCID

Abstract

AbstractNeurofilament light (NfL) concentration in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and blood serves as an important biomarker in neurology drug development. Changes in NfL are generally assumed to reflect changes in neuronal damage, while little is known about the clearance of NfL from biofluids. We observed an NfL increase of 3.5-fold in plasma and 5.7-fold in CSF in an asymptomatic individual at risk for genetic prion disease following 6 weeks’ treatment with oral minocycline for a dermatologic indication. Other biomarkers remained normal, and proteomic analysis of CSF revealed that the spike was exquisitely specific to neurofilaments. NfL dropped nearly to normal levels 5 weeks after minocycline cessation, and the individual remained free of disease 2 years later. Plasma NfL in dermatology patients was not elevated above normal controls. Dramatically high plasma NfL (>500 pg/mL) was variably observed in some hospitalized individuals receiving minocycline. In mice, treatment with minocycline resulted in variable increases of 1.3- to 4.0-fold in plasma NfL, with complete washout 2 weeks after cessation. In neuron-microglia co-cultures, minocycline increased NfL concentration in conditioned media by 3.0-fold without any visually obvious impact on neuronal health. We hypothesize that minocycline does not cause or exacerbate neuronal damage, but instead impacts the clearance of NfL from biofluids, a potential confounder for interpretation of this biomarker.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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