CSF SAA status associates with levodopa responsiveness and motor progression in Parkinson's disease patients.
This observational cohort study evaluated 223 sporadic Parkinson's disease participants from the Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative (PPMI) cohort who initiated levodopa treatment. Participants were stratified by cerebrospinal fluid alpha-synuclein seed amplification assay (SAA) status, comprising 40 SAA- patients and 183 SAA+ patients. The longitudinal follow-up duration was not reported in the study.
Primary outcomes assessed the association between SAA status, levodopa responsiveness, and dopaminergic denervation. SAA+ patients showed a slower ON-state motor progression rate of 0.87 vs 3.47 points/year compared to SAA- patients (p = 0.01). Proportional levodopa responsiveness increased in SAA+ patients while declining in SAA- patients over time (p = 0.036). Caudate DAT binding was lower in SAA- patients at treatment initiation (p = 0.002), and dopaminergic decline was faster in SAA- patients (p = 0.008).
Safety data regarding adverse events, serious adverse events, and discontinuations were not reported. Motor complications were fewer at initiation in SAA+ patients, though progression was similar over time. The study reports association; text states faster dopaminergic denervation in SAA- patients may underlie the difference in levodopa response. Observational cohort study design limits causal inference regarding treatment effects. SAA status captures clinically relevant heterogeneity that may inform patient stratification and therapeutic decision-making for clinicians.