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Non-invasive optoacoustic imaging of glycogen-storage and muscle degeneration in late-onset Pompe disease

Journal article

Fast facts

  • Internal authorship

  • Further publishers

    Lina Tan, Jana Zschüntzsch, Stefanie Meyer, Alica Stobbe, Hannah Bruex, Adrian P Regensburger, Merle Claßen, Frauke Alves, Jörg Jüngert, Ulrich Rother, Yi Li, Vera Danko, Werner Lang, Matthias Türk, Sandy Schmidt, Matthias Vorgerd, Joachim Woelfle, Andreas Hahn, Alexander Mensch, Martin Winterholler, Regina Trollmann, Rafael Heiß, Alexandra L Wagner, Roman Raming, Ferdinand Knieling

  • Publishment

    • Springer Nature (Cham) 2024
  • Purpose of publication

  • Organizational unit

  • Subjects

    • Neurology
  • Research structures

    • BioMedicalTechnology (BMT)
  • Research fields

    • People and society - General

Quote

L. Tan, J. Zschüntzsch, S. Meyer, A. Stobbe, H. Bruex, A. P. Regensburger, M. Claßen, F. Alves, J. Jüngert, U. Rother, Y. Li, V. Danko, W. Lang, M. Türk, S. Schmidt, M. Vorgerd, L. Schlaffke, J. Woelfle, A. Hahn, A. Mensch, M. Winterholler, R. Trollmann, R. Heiß, A. L. Wagner, R. Raming, and F. Knieling, "Non-invasive optoacoustic imaging of glycogen-storage and muscle degeneration in late-onset Pompe disease," Nature Communications, vol. 15, no. 1, p. 7843, 2024.

Content

Pompe disease (PD) is a rare autosomal recessive glycogen storage disorder that causes proximal muscle weakness and loss of respiratory function. While enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) is the only effective treatment, biomarkers for disease monitoring are scarce. Following ex vivo biomarker validation in phantom studies, we apply multispectral optoacoustic tomography (MSOT), a laser- and ultrasound-based non-invasive imaging approach, in a clinical trial (NCT05083806) to image the biceps muscles of 10 late-onset PD (LOPD) patients and 10 matched healthy controls. MSOT is compared with muscle magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), ultrasound, spirometry, muscle testing and quality of life scores. Next, results are validated in an independent LOPD patient cohort from a second clinical site. Our study demonstrates that MSOT enables imaging of subcellular disease pathology with increases in glycogen/water, collagen and lipid signals, providing higher sensitivity in detecting muscle degeneration than current methods. This translational approach suggests implementation in the complex care of these rare disease patients.

References

DOI 10.1038/s41467-024-52143-6

Notes and references

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