This experiment aims to validate a multimodal biomarker panel for early diagnosis, disease progression monitoring, and therapeutic response prediction in Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) and Corticobasal Syndrome (CBS). Currently, there are no validated biomarkers for these 4R-tauopathies, making differential diagnosis challenging and clinical trial enrollment inefficient.
Hypothesis
Primary Hypothesis: A combination of fluid biomarkers ([NfL](/biomarkers/neurofilament-light-chain-nfl), p-tau181, p-tau217), [imaging biomarkers](/biomarkers/tau-pet-cbs-psp) (tau PET, MRI atrophy patterns), and [genetic markers](/mechanisms/cbs-psp-genetic-architecture) will achieve ≥90% sensitivity and specificity for distinguishing PSP/CBS from other neurodegenerative diseases.
Secondary Hypothesis: Baseline biomarker levels will predict disease progression rate and treatment response in clinical trials.
Background
Current challenges in PSP/CBS diagnosis and monitoring:
Clinical diagnosis relies on symptom presence, often delaying accurate diagnosis by 2-3 years
No validated biomarkers for differential diagnosis
Clinical trial endpoints are insensitive to early disease changes
Patient stratification for clinical trials is suboptimal
...
PSP CBS Biomarker Validation
Overview
This experiment aims to validate a multimodal biomarker panel for early diagnosis, disease progression monitoring, and therapeutic response prediction in Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP) and Corticobasal Syndrome (CBS). Currently, there are no validated biomarkers for these 4R-tauopathies, making differential diagnosis challenging and clinical trial enrollment inefficient.
Hypothesis
Primary Hypothesis: A combination of fluid biomarkers ([NfL](/biomarkers/neurofilament-light-chain-nfl), p-tau181, p-tau217), [imaging biomarkers](/biomarkers/tau-pet-cbs-psp) (tau PET, MRI atrophy patterns), and [genetic markers](/mechanisms/cbs-psp-genetic-architecture) will achieve ≥90% sensitivity and specificity for distinguishing PSP/CBS from other neurodegenerative diseases.
Secondary Hypothesis: Baseline biomarker levels will predict disease progression rate and treatment response in clinical trials.
Background
Current challenges in PSP/CBS diagnosis and monitoring:
Clinical diagnosis relies on symptom presence, often delaying accurate diagnosis by 2-3 years
No validated biomarkers for differential diagnosis
Clinical trial endpoints are insensitive to early disease changes
Patient stratification for clinical trials is suboptimal
Existing biomarker candidates:
[Neurofilament light chain (NfL)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/): Elevated in PSP/CBS, correlates with disease severity
[p-tau181 and p-tau217](/biomarkers/cbs-psp-plasma-biomarkers): Potential tau-specific markers
[MRI atrophy patterns](/biomarkers/mri-atrophy-cbs-psp): Midbrain, superior cerebellar peduncle