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A Proteomic Atlas of Cerebrospinal Fluid at Scale: Recalibrating Biomarkers and Staging in Multiple Sclerosis
A Proteomic Atlas of Cerebrospinal Fluid at Scale: Recalibrating Biomarkers and Staging in Multiple Sclerosis

This blog post examines a large-scale cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) proteomics study that profiled thousands of neurological samples to disentangle shared inflammatory signals from disease-enriched molecular patterns relevant to multiple sclerosis (MS). It highlights how major confounders—particularly blood–CSF barrier dysfunction—reshape the CSF proteome and can inflate biomarker claims if not explicitly modeled. The post then discusses how the authors leverage high-throughput mass spectrometry and clinically realistic comparator cohorts to identify a limited but robust set of MS-informative proteins, propose a proteome-based staging framework linked to disability, and translate discovery findings into a targeted 22-protein assay aimed at improving differential diagnosis, including in oligoclonal band–negative cases. Overall, it frames the work as both a biological insight engine and a practical roadmap for assay-ready, clinically aligned proteomic biomarker development.

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