Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology (Jun 2020)

Transmission of CJD from nasal brushings but not spinal fluid or RT‐QuIC product

  • Gregory J. Raymond,
  • Brent Race,
  • Christina D. Orrú,
  • Lynne D. Raymond,
  • Matilde Bongianni,
  • Michele Fiorini,
  • Bradley R. Groveman,
  • Sergio Ferrari,
  • Luca Sacchetto,
  • Andrew G. Hughson,
  • Salvatore Monaco,
  • Maurizio Pocchiari,
  • Gianluigi Zanusso,
  • Byron Caughey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/acn3.51057
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 6
pp. 932 – 944

Abstract

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Abstract Objective The detection of prion seeding activity in CSF and olfactory mucosal brushings using real‐time quaking‐induced conversion assays allows highly accurate clinical diagnosis of sporadic Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease. To gauge transmission risks associated with these biospecimens and their testing, we have bioassayed prion infectivity levels in patients’ brain tissue, nasal brushings, and CSF, and assessed the pathogenicity of amplified products of real‐time quaking‐induced conversion assays seeded with Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease prions. Methods We obtained olfactory mucosal brushings and CSF from patients with a final diagnosis of sporadic Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease subtype MM1 (n = 3). Samples were inoculated intracerebrally into Tg66 transgenic mice that overexpress the homologous human 129M prion protein. The mice were evaluated for clinical, neuropathological, and biochemical evidence of prion infection. Results Patients’ brain tissue at 102 to 105 fold dilutions affected 47/48 Tg66 mice. In contrast, maximum acutely tolerable doses of insoluble pellets from their olfactory mucosa brushings caused evidence of prion disease in only 4/28 inoculated mice, and no effects were seen with 10‐fold dilutions. No clinical prion disease was observed in mice inoculated with antemortem CSF samples or prion‐seeded real‐time quaking‐induced conversion assay products. Interpretation Pellets from patients’ olfactory mucosa brushings had ≥10,000‐fold lower infectivity per unit volume than brain tissue, while CSF lacked detectable infectivity. Nonetheless, the results suggest that appropriate precautions may be warranted in surgical interventions involving the olfactory areas. The lack of pathogenic infectivity in the real‐time quaking‐induced conversion assay products provides evidence that the assay does not replicate biohazardous prions in vitro.