ePoster

FNIRS AS A NEW BIOMARKER FOR RARE NEURODEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS

Camilla Simoncelliand 9 co-authors

IRCCS Stella Maris Foundation

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS06-09PM-041

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS06-09PM-041

Poster preview

FNIRS AS A NEW BIOMARKER FOR RARE NEURODEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS06-09PM-041

Abstract

Angelman syndrome (AS) and Creatine Transporter Deficiency (CTD) are rare neurodevelopmental disorders characterized by severe cognitive, motor, linguistic and behavioral impairments. AS is primarily caused by a mutation or deletion of the maternal UBE3A gene in chromosome 15, while CTD results from mutations in the SLC6A8 gene on the X chromosome, which impairs creatine transport into neurons.
A major challenge in neurodevelopmental disorder research is the lack of validated, objective measures capable of reliably quantifying brain function and tracking therapeutic effects over time. This limitation hampers accurate assessment of treatment efficacy and represents an obstacle to the design and success of clinical trials. In the absence of developmentally appropriate, real-time indicators of neural function, therapeutic development remains constrained, contributing to the limited effectiveness and slow progress of available interventions.
With the goal of integrating hemodynamic response metrics into clinical trial frameworks to improve diagnostic monitoring, patient stratification, and evaluation of treatment outcomes, this study investigates functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS) as a feasible and sensitive biomarker in Angelman Syndrome (AS) and cortical visual dysfunction (CTD), using visually evoked cortical responses.
Our results demonstrate robust cerebral activation, with visual stimulation consistently eliciting reliable hemodynamic responses in neurotypical controls as well as in AS and CTD patients, with larger response amplitudes observed in the patient groups. Importantly, this repeatable activation was evident even in individuals with limited behavioral engagement, underscoring the high sensitivity, tolerability, and clinical viability of fNIRS as a non-invasive tool for objectively assessing sensory processing in behaviorally complex populations.

Average fNIRS signal across channels for baseline and stimulation conditions in neurotypical controls and individuals with AS. The neurotypical control group (top row, N = 17) and the group of individuals with AS (bottom row, N = 23) are shown across measures of oxygenated hemoglobin (HbO), total hemoglobin (HbT), and deoxygenated hemoglobin (HbR). The baseline condition is depicted in blue, while the stimulation condition is shown in red. In the control group, visual stimulation produced a positive deflection in HbO and HbT concentrations compared to baseline, with minimal change in HbR— reflecting a canonical pattern of neural activation in the visual cortex. Notably, despite the challenges typically associated with eliciting reliable cortical responses in individuals with neurodevelopmental disorders, participants with AS also exhibited increases in HbO and HbT during stimulation, although with greater inter-subject variability. These results highlight the robustness and clinical relevance of the paradigm, demonstrating its capacity to evoke measurable cortical responses even in populations with severe neurological impairments.

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