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DIAGNOSTIC AND PROGNOSTIC UTILITY OF SERUM Β-SYNUCLEIN IN ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE: A LONGITUDINAL COHORT STUDY

Siqi Xie, Yumei Liang, Ting Yang, Dandan Sheng, Lan Ding, Jianping Jia, Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative

BACKGROUND: Serum β-synuclein is an emerging blood-based biomarker for synaptic integrity in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). However, its comparative performance against the established CSF marker neurogranin and its prognostic utility for longitudinal disease progression remain to be fully characterized. METHOD: We analyzed 475 participants from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative. We compared serum β-synuclein and CSF neurogranin using receiver operating characteristic analysis and Cox proportional hazards models. We also assessed the cross-sectional associations of both biomarkers with cognitive and neuroimaging markers using linear regression. Linear mixed-effects models were applied to determine if baseline serum β-synuclein levels and longitudinal rate of change predicted disease progression. Finally, the trajectory of serum β-synuclein was modeled across the AD continuum. RESULTS: Serum β-synuclein distinguished clinical AD dementia from controls with high accuracy (AUC = 0.84). Cross-sectionally, it exhibited robust associations with cognitive deficits and neuroimaging markers, comparable to or exceeding those of CSF neurogranin. Higher baseline serum β-synuclein, but not CSF neurogranin, significantly predicted the risk of conversion to dementia (hazard ratio = 1.83). Longitudinally, both elevated baseline levels and faster rates of increase in serum β-synuclein predicted accelerated cognitive decline and neurodegeneration, independent of baseline amyloid or tau pathology. Trajectory analysis revealed that serum β-synuclein levels accelerated significantly over time specifically in individuals with concurrent amyloid and tau pathology. DISCUSSION: Serum β-synuclein serves as a robust prognostic biomarker for AD, demonstrating diagnostic accuracy for clinical dementia and superior predictive utility for disease conversion compared to CSF neurogranin. Its ability to track synaptic degeneration independent of core proteinopathies highlights its potential as a dynamic outcome measure for monitoring disease progression in clinical trials.

CITATION:
Siqi Xie ; Yumei Liang ; Ting Yang ; Dandan Sheng ; Lan Ding ; Jianping Jia ; Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (2026): Diagnostic and prognostic utility of serum β-synuclein in Alzheimer’s disease: a longitudinal cohort study. The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer’s Disease (JPAD). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tjpad.2026.100514

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