Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) causes rapid motor decline and severe dopaminergic dysfunction. While uric acid (UA) may act as a neuroprotective antioxidant in some neurodegenerative disorders (like Parkinson’s disease), its role in PSP remains unclear. This study evaluated the relationship between serum UA levels, measured cross-sectionally and longitudinally, and striatal dopamine transporter binding in PSP. A total of 33 PSP patients with repeated pre-123IFP-CIT SPECT UA measurements, along with 30 healthy control individuals and 30 patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD), were retrospectively analyzed. Group and sex effects were analyzed with t tests and ANOVA. Effects of mean UA and longitudinal UA trajectories on FP-CIT SPECT binding in PSP were modeled using linear mixed-effects models and regressed against binding in four regions (caudate and putamen), separated into more-affected and less-affected side for both sexes. A Bayesian two-stage measurement-error model provided sensitivity analysis. UA was significantly lower in PSP (4.98 mg/dl) and AD (4.69 mg/dl) compared to healthy controls (5.71 mg/dL; p = 0.001). Sex had a significant effect on UA (F(1, 89) = 9.38, p = 0.003, partial η2 = 0.10), however, this effect was significant only in PSP (p 0.7). Bayesian estimates corroborated the absence of a credible relationship. In the present cohort, serum UA is reduced in PSP, primarily in females, but neither mean levels nor longitudinal changes are related to striatal 123IFP-CIT SPECT binding, suggesting no clear association with dopaminergic degeneration in PSP, without precluding a potential role of uric acid at other disease stages.
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Dominic Buchinger
Teodora Aleksic
Christof Brücke
Journal of Neural Transmission
Medical University of Vienna
Comprehensive Cancer Center Vienna
Donauspital
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Buchinger et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d892886c1944d70ce03f6f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00702-026-03141-z