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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2017 Feb 1.
Published in final edited form as: Muscle Nerve. 2015 Dec 29;53(2):169–182. doi: 10.1002/mus.24979

Table 1.

Biomarker Types Recognized by the FDA

Biomarker Type Description 2 Examples relevant to ALS
Diagnostic Disease characteristics that categorize people by the presence or absence of a specific physiological or pathophysiological state or disease
  • EMG for demonstrating the presence and distribution of subclinical lower motor neuron pathology

Prognostic Baseline characteristics that categorizes patients by degree of risk for disease occurrence or progression of a specific aspect of disease (i.e. inform the natural history of the disorder in a particular patient in the absence of a therapeutic intervention)
  • Mutations in ALS susceptibility genes categorize individuals as being at risk for developing ALS.

  • Some specific mutations, such as the A4V mutation in the SOD1 gene, predict an aggressive form of disease and portend a very poor prognosis for survival.

Predictive Baseline characteristics that categorize patients by their likelihood of response to a particular treatment relative to no treatment. Such biomarkers may be used as an enrichment strategy to identify a subpopulation likely to respond to treatment intervention in a particular way
  • The presence of mutations in the SOD1 gene or a hexanucleotide repeat expansion in the C9ORF72 gene might be used to select for a clinical trial those patients most likely to benefit from SOD1 and C9ORF72 antisense oligonucleotides.

Pharmacodynamic Markers that show that a biological response has occurred in a patient who has received a therapeutic intervention
  • Biological measurements that are abnormal (e.g. elevated) but stable over time in the absence of therapy (e.g. neurofilament light chain) as well as biomarkers of disease progression

  • May also be drug - rather than disease- specific, indicating that a drug has, for example, engaged its intended target and exerted the intended biological effect.