Importance: While systemic inflammation has been implicated in the aetiology of selected neurodegenerative disorders, its role in the development of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is untested.
Objective: To quantify the relationship of C-reactive protein (CRP), an acute-phase reactant and marker of systemic inflammation, with ALS occurrence.
Design setting participants: UK Biobank, a prospective cohort study of 502,649 participants who were aged 37 to 73 years when examined at research centres between 2006 and 2010.
Exposure: Venous blood was collected at baseline in the full cohort and assayed for CRP. Repeat measurement was made 3-7 years later in a representative subgroup (N=14,514) enabling correction for regression dilution.
Main outcomes and measures: ALS as ascertained via national hospitalisation and mortality registries. We computed multi-variable hazard ratios with accompanying 95% confidence intervals for log-transformed CRP expressed as standard deviation and tertiles.
Results: In an analytical sample of 400,884 individuals (218,203 women), a mean follow-up of 12 years gave rise to 231 hospitalisations and 223 deaths ascribed to ALS. After adjustment for covariates which included health behaviours, comorbidity, and socio-economic status, a one standard deviation higher log-CRP was associated with elevated rates of both ALS mortality (hazard ratios; 95% confidence intervals: 1.32; 1.13, 1.53) and hospitalisations (1.20; 1.00, 1.39). There was evidence of dose-response effects across tertiles of CRP for both outcomes (p for trend≤0.05). Correction for regression dilution led to a strengthening of the relationship with CRP for both mortality (1.62; 1.27, 2.08) and hospitalisations (1.37; 1.05, 1.76) ascribed to ALS.
Conclusions and relevance: Higher levels of CRP, a blood-based biomarker widely captured in clinical practice, were associated with a higher subsequent risk of ALS.
Key points: Question: Is C-reactive protein (CRP), a marker of systemic inflammation widely used in clinical practice, associated with later risk of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)?Findings: Following 11 years disease surveillance in 400,884 individuals (218,203 women), after adjustment for covariates and correction for regression dilution, a one standard deviation higher CRP levels were associations with both mortality (hazard ratio; 95% confidence interval: 1.62; 1.27, 2.08) and hospitalisations (1.37; 1.05, 1.76) ascribed to ALS.Meaning: In the present study, CRP has a dose-response relationship with the risk of later ALS.