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Neurofilament Light Chain (NfL) in Blood - Biomarker
Neurofilament Light Chain (NfL) in Blood - Biomarker
Pathway Diagram
Overview
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Neurofilament Light Chain (NfL) in Blood - Biomarker
Pathway Diagram
Overview
Neurofilament light chain (NfL) is a promising blood-based biomarker for neurodegenerative diseases. NfL is a structural protein of large myelinated axons that is released into cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and blood upon axonal injury[@khalil2018]. The detection of NfL in plasma and serum provides a minimally invasive way to monitor neuronal damage in real time[@barro2018].
NfL has emerged as one of the most validated biomarkers for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease (PD), multiple sclerosis (MS), and frontotemporal dementia (FTD)[@gaetani2019].
Properties
| Property | Value |
|----------|-------|
| Full Name | Neurofilament Light Polypeptide |
| Abbreviation | NfL |
| Gene Symbol | NEFL |
| Molecular Weight | ~61 kDa (native), ~10 kDa (fragments in blood) |
| Source | Neuronal axonal cytoskeleton |
| Sample Types | Plasma, Serum, CSF |
| Detection Method | Simoa, ELISA, Mass Spectrometry |
Biomarker Characteristics
NfL is considered a general marker of axonal injury rather than disease-specific. Elevated levels indicate:
- Axonal degeneration
- Neuronal death
- White matter damage
- Active disease progression
Sensitivity and Specificity
| Disease | Sensitivity | Specificity | Notes |
|---------|-------------|------------|-------|
| ALS | 85-95% | 80-90% | Highest in ALS; correlates with progression |
| AD | 75-85% | 70-80% | Moderate elevations |
| PD | 60-70% | 75-85% | Lower than AD |
| FTD | 70-80% | 75-85% | Similar to AD |
| MS | 80-90% | 85-95% | Good for disease activity |
Clinical Applications
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)
NfL is FDA Breakthrough Device designated for ALS prognosis. Key applications include[@benatar2018]:
- Diagnosis support: Elevated NfL helps differentiate ALS from mimic conditions
- Progression monitoring: Higher baseline levels predict faster progression
- Clinical trial enrichment: Using NfL to select patients likely to progress
- Treatment response: Changes in NfL may indicate drug efficacy
Alzheimer's Disease
In AD, NfL reflects gray matter atrophy and axonal damage[@mattsson2019]:
- Stage-dependent: Higher in later disease stages
- Progression marker: Longitudinal increases correlate with cognitive decline
- Prognostic value: Elevated NfL predicts faster MMSE decline
- Combination with p-tau: NfL + p-tau improves diagnostic accuracy
Parkinson's Disease
In PD, NfL indicates neurodegeneration severity[@parnetti2019]:
- PD vs. PDD: Higher in Parkinson's disease with dementia
- Atypical parkinsonism: Much higher in MSA, PSP than PD
- Progression marker: Annual increases correlate with motor decline
Multiple Sclerosis
NfL is highly sensitive to disease activity in MS[@bhan2018]:
- New lesions: NfL spikes with new MRI lesions
- Treatment monitoring: Successful therapy reduces NfL levels
- Prognosis: High NfL predicts future disability
Sample Handling
| Factor | Recommendation |
|--------|----------------|
| Collection | EDTA plasma or serum |
| Centrifugation | 2000-3000 × g for 10-15 minutes |
| Storage | -80°C for long-term; -20°C acceptable for short-term |
| Free-thaw cycles | Minimize; ≤3 cycles recommended |
| Hemolysis | Avoid hemolyzed samples |
Background
The study of Neurofilament Light Chain (Nfl) In Blood Biomarker has evolved significantly over the past decades. Research in this area has revealed important insights into the underlying mechanisms of neurodegeneration and continues to drive therapeutic development.
Historical context and key discoveries in this field have shaped our current understanding and will continue to guide future research directions.
Reference Ranges
| Population | Plasma NfL (pg/mL) | Interpretation |
|------------|-------------------|----------------|
| Healthy adults (20-40) | 5-15 | Normal |
| Healthy adults (60-80) | 10-25 | Age-adjusted normal |
| ALS | 30-200 | Significantly elevated |
| AD | 15-80 | Moderately elevated |
| PD | 10-40 | Mildly elevated |
| MSA/PSP | 30-100 | Highly elevated |
Note: Reference ranges vary by assay platform and laboratory.
Plasma NfL vs. CSF NfL
While CSF NfL has been the traditional matrix, plasma NfL offers significant advantages:
- Non-invasive: No lumbar puncture required
- Wider applicability: Suitable for screening and population studies
- Longitudinal monitoring: Easier for repeated measurements
- Cost-effective: Reduced procedural costs
Correlation Studies
Plasma and CSF NfL show strong correlation (r = 0.7-0.9) across neurodegenerative diseases[@hansson2019]. However, plasma levels are approximately 10-40 times lower than CSF, requiring ultra-sensitive detection methods like Simoa.
Disease-Specific Patterns
| Disease | Plasma:CSF Ratio | Clinical Implication |
|---------|------------------|---------------------|
| ALS | ~1:40 | Reflects rapid axonal loss |
| AD | ~1:20 | Moderate blood-brain barrier penetration |
| PD | ~1:15 | Slower disease course |
| MS | ~1:30 | Active demyelination |
Assay Platforms
Single Molecule Array (Simoa)
- Company: Quanterix
- Sensitivity: 0.04 pg/mL
- Advantages: Highest sensitivity, low sample volume (10 μL)
- Standard: Most widely used in research
Electrochemiluminescence (ECL)
- Company: Meso Scale Discovery (MSD)
- Sensitivity: 0.5 pg/mL
- Advantages: Wide dynamic range, multiplex capability
ELISA
- Company: Various (Cusabio, BioVendor)
- Sensitivity: 10-50 pg/mL
- Advantages: Lower cost, widely available
- Limitations: Less sensitive for low levels
Advantages and Limitations
Advantages
- Minimally invasive - Blood draw instead of lumbar puncture
- High sensitivity - Detects subclinical axonal injury
- Well-validated - Extensive clinical data across diseases
- Rapid results - Commercial assays available
- Longitudinal monitoring - Suitable for repeated measures
Limitations
- Not disease-specific - Elevated in many neurological conditions
- Age effect - Levels increase with normal aging
- Confounding factors - Traumatic brain injury, stroke can elevate
- Assay variability - Different platforms give different values
- Limited prognostic specificity - Predicts progression but not cause
Therapeutic Implications
| Drug Class | Potential Effect on NfL | Status |
|------------|------------------------|--------|
| Anti-amyloid (lecanemab, donanemab) | May reduce NfL | Under investigation |
| ALS drugs (riluzole, edaravone) | Minimal effect on NfL | Clinical data limited |
| Immunomodulators (in MS) | Reduce NfL with treatment | Demonstrated |
| Neuroprotective agents | Target NfL reduction | Preclinical |
Clinical Utility in Different Diseases
ALS Clinical Practice
- Baseline measurement: At diagnosis to establish prognosis
- Serial monitoring: Every 3-6 months to track progression
- Trial eligibility: NfL thresholds for clinical trial enrichment
- Care planning: NfL helps predict disease trajectory
AD Clinical Trials
- Patient stratification: NfL + p-tau for biomarker-defined populations
- Pharmacodynamic marker: Treatment effect on NfL trajectory
- Safety monitoring: NfL increases may indicate ARIA
MS Disease Monitoring
- Baseline: At diagnosis to assess damage burden
- Active monitoring: After new lesions or treatment changes
- Treatment response: NfL reduction indicates efficacy
AAIC 2026 Updates
At AAIC 2026, NfL research highlighted several key advancements:
Treatment monitoring applications: NfL trajectory changes with successful amyloid removal, providing a biomarker endpoint for treatment response. Patients demonstrating NfL stabilization or reduction showed slower cognitive decline on disease-modifying therapies.
Prognostic applications: Population-based studies demonstrated that individuals with elevated NfL (above 20 pg/mL in plasma) progressed to dementia at rates approximately 5-fold higher than those with normal levels. Serial NfL measurements improved prognostic accuracy.
Cross-disease comparisons: AD showed moderate NfL elevations (15-30 pg/mL plasma), while frontotemporal dementia and Lewy body dementia showed variable patterns informing differential diagnosis.
GFAP/NfL ratio: A ratio above 0.5 suggested AD-type pathology, while lower ratios indicated non-AD neurodegeneration, providing distinctive diagnostic information beyond individual biomarkers.
Future Directions
- Standardization: Develop universal reference standards[@kuhle2020]
- Point-of-care testing: Rapid bedside NfL detection
- Combination biomarkers: NfL + p-tau + other markers for precision
- Digital biomarkers: NfL + wearable sensor data integration
- Trial endpoints: NfL as validated biomarker endpoint
Allen Brain Atlas Resources
- [Allen Brain Atlas - Gene Expression](https://human.brain-map.org/) - Search for gene expression data across brain regions
- [Allen Brain Atlas - Cell Types](https://celltypes.brain-map.org/) - Explore neuronal cell type taxonomy
External Links
- [NFL Consortium](https://nflconsortium.org)
- [Simoa NfL Assay](https://www.quanterix.com/simoa-nfl/)
- [ALSA NfL Research](https://www.alsassociation.org/nfl-research)
References
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Pathway Diagram
The following diagram shows the key molecular relationships involving Neurofilament Light Chain (NfL) in Blood - Biomarker discovered through SciDEX knowledge graph analysis:
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| slug | biomarkers-neurofilament-light-chain-blood-nfl |
| kg_node_id | None |
| entity_type | biomarker |
| origin_type | v1_polymorphic_backfill |
| source_table | wiki_pages |
| wiki_page_id | wp-fec0ab786b71 |
| __merged_from | {'merged_at': '2026-05-13', 'unprefixed_id': 'biomarkers-neurofilament-light-chain-blood-nfl'} |
| _schema_version | 1 |
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