Article

The Miami Framework for ALS and related neurodegenerative disorders: an integrated view of phenotype and biology

Details

Citation

Benatar M, Wuu J, Huey ED, McMillan CT, Petersen RC, Postuma R, McHutchison C, Dratch L, Arias JJ, Crawley A, Houlden H, McDermott MP, Cai X, Thakur N & Boxer A (2024) The Miami Framework for ALS and related neurodegenerative disorders: an integrated view of phenotype and biology. Nature Reviews Neurology, 20, pp. 364-376. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41582-024-00961-z

Abstract
Increasing appreciation of the phenotypic and biological overlap between amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia, alongside evolving biomarker evidence for a pre-symptomatic stage of disease and observations that this stage of disease might not always be clinically silent, is challenging traditional views of these disorders. These advances have highlighted the need to adapt ingrained notions of these clinical syndromes to include both the full phenotypic continuum — from clinically silent, to prodromal, to clinically manifest — and the expanded phenotypic spectrum that includes ALS, frontotemporal dementia and some movement disorders. The updated clinical paradigms should also align with our understanding of the biology of these disorders, reflected in measurable biomarkers. The Miami Framework, emerging from discussions at the Second International Pre-Symptomatic ALS Workshop in Miami (February 2023; a full list of attendees and their affiliations appears in the Supplementary Information) proposes a classification system built on: first, three parallel phenotypic axes — motor neuron, frontotemporal and extrapyramidal — rather than the unitary approach of combining all phenotypic elements into a single clinical entity; and second, biomarkers that reflect different aspects of the underlying pathology and biology of neurodegeneration. This framework decouples clinical syndromes from biomarker evidence of disease and builds on experiences from other neurodegenerative diseases to offer a unified approach to specifying the pleiotropic clinical manifestations of disease and describing the trajectory of emergent biomarkers.

Journal
Nature Reviews Neurology: Volume 20

StatusPublished
FundersUniversity of Edinburgh
Publication date30/06/2024
Publication date online20/05/2024
Date accepted by journal01/04/2024
PublisherSpringer Science and Business Media LLC
ISSN1759-4758
eISSN1759-4766

People (1)

Dr Caroline McHutchison

Dr Caroline McHutchison

Lecturer in Psychology, Psychology