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Observational Study
. 2020 Nov;88(5):984-994.
doi: 10.1002/ana.25889. Epub 2020 Sep 15.

Association of Plasma Neurofilament Light with Postoperative Delirium

Affiliations
Observational Study

Association of Plasma Neurofilament Light with Postoperative Delirium

Tamara G Fong et al. Ann Neurol. 2020 Nov.

Abstract

Objective: To examine the association of the plasma neuroaxonal injury markers neurofilament light (NfL), total tau, glial fibrillary acid protein, and ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase L1 with delirium, delirium severity, and cognitive performance.

Methods: Delirium case-no delirium control (n = 108) pairs were matched by age, sex, surgery type, cognition, and vascular comorbidities. Biomarkers were measured in plasma collected preoperatively (PREOP), and 2 days (POD2) and 30 days postoperatively (PO1MO) using Simoa technology (Quanterix, Lexington, MA). The Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) and CAM-S (Severity) were used to measure delirium and delirium severity, respectively. Cognitive function was measured with General Cognitive Performance (GCP) scores.

Results: Delirium cases had higher NfL on POD2 and PO1MO (median matched pair difference = 16.2pg/ml and 13.6pg/ml, respectively; p < 0.05). Patients with PREOP and POD2 NfL in the highest quartile (Q4) had increased risk for incident delirium (adjusted odds ratio [OR] = 3.7 [95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.1-12.6] and 4.6 [95% CI = 1.2-18.2], respectively) and experienced more severe delirium, with sum CAM-S scores 7.8 points (95% CI = 1.6-14.0) and 9.3 points higher (95% CI = 3.2-15.5). At PO1MO, delirium cases had continued high NfL (adjusted OR = 9.7, 95% CI = 2.3-41.4), and those with Q4 NfL values showed a -2.3 point decline in GCP score (-2.3 points, 95% CI = -4.7 to -0.9).

Interpretation: Patients with the highest PREOP or POD2 NfL levels were more likely to develop delirium. Elevated NfL at PO1MO was associated with delirium and greater cognitive decline. These findings suggest NfL may be useful as a predictive biomarker for delirium risk and long-term cognitive decline, and once confirmed would provide pathophysiological evidence for neuroaxonal injury following delirium. ANN NEUROL 2020;88:984-994.

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Conflict of interest statement

Potential Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Neurofilament light (NfL) values over time. Each black line represent the difference in NfL levels between the delirium and no delirium case in each of 54 pairs, matched by age, baseline GCP, sex, surgery type, presence of vascular comorbidity, and Apolipoprotein E ε4 carrier status. The red line is the median paired-difference (MPD) across the cohort wheras the blue line shows a difference of zero across all time points for reference. * P < .05 MPD=median paired difference, NfL=neurofilament light chain, PO1MO=postoperative 1 month, POD2=postoperative day 2, PREOP=preoperative

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