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Real-world performance of CSF kappa free light chains in the 2024 McDonald Criteria

Real-world performance of CSF kappa free light chains in the 2024 McDonald Criteria
Real-world performance of CSF kappa free light chains in the 2024 McDonald Criteria
Objective: Kappa free light chains (KFLCs) in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) have a similar performance to CSF-restricted oligoclonal bands (OCB) for multiple sclerosis (MS) diagnosis. To help with implementation, we set out to resolve several remaining uncertainties: (1) performance in a real-world cohort and the 2024 McDonald criteria; (2) equivalence to OCB in the specific clinical scenario when demonstration of intrathecal immunoglobulin synthesis is essential for MS diagnosis; (3) which KFLC metric has the best diagnostic performance.

Methods: A retrospective study of 740 cases was conducted, categorised into three groups: MS (2024 McDonald criteria), other neuroinflammatory disorders and non-inflammatory groups. CSF and serum KFLC and albumin were assayed with immunoturbidimetry. OCB status was assessed using isoelectric focusing. Eight KFLC metrics were tested: CSF KFLC, KFLC index, three population-based models of the upper limit for the CSF/serum kappa quotient corrected for CSF/serum albumin quotient, and their corresponding intrathecal fractions.

Results: The KFLC index and the KFLC intrathecal fraction performed as well as OCB; no cases were missed when KFLC was mandatory to achieve a MS diagnosis. Intrathecal fraction computation improved the performance of the population-based models.

Interpretation: In the setting of the 2024 McDonald criteria, KFLC metrics correcting for the CSF/serum albumin quotient were equivalent to OCBs. The intrathecal fraction provided no advantage over the KFLC index, which is simpler to compute. Importantly, the KFLC index can replace OCB when CSF positivity is essential for diagnosis. We provide an explanation for KFLC's comparable diagnostic performance despite its inability to identify CSF-only clones.
2328-9503
Leibowitz, Maya
1886546a-5e7a-466f-be6b-b62d3fdd882a
Cooper, Ryan
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Kaninia, Stefania
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Challis, Kathryn
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Greenway, William
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Bonello, Maria
ce6cd753-a0f7-453c-af5a-dd7081f0dbc0
Elbahnasawi, Mahmoud
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Shode, Deborah
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Gajdasik, Dominika
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Iliev, Victor
7e222f7f-8ec8-448d-9157-11facae16c00
Whitelegg, Alison
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Galea, Ian
66209a2f-f7e6-4d63-afe4-e9299f156f0b
Leibowitz, Maya
1886546a-5e7a-466f-be6b-b62d3fdd882a
Cooper, Ryan
41c427a7-b47b-4799-b3fd-5474c5023b6b
Kaninia, Stefania
ece5cc76-f8c8-4e94-a1ea-8978a6df9e7e
Challis, Kathryn
d2cc5f3c-1b08-4159-af5a-ba8944fdcff4
Greenway, William
6f5ad8e3-126b-426c-bd59-1f36890b597c
Bonello, Maria
ce6cd753-a0f7-453c-af5a-dd7081f0dbc0
Elbahnasawi, Mahmoud
fd7722ce-0f05-4624-896e-084608f17aa6
Shode, Deborah
079316e5-81f8-44f7-a649-af9b22d44005
Gajdasik, Dominika
81ec1dc0-2fc3-4099-b2cc-8e2f080bd7df
Iliev, Victor
7e222f7f-8ec8-448d-9157-11facae16c00
Whitelegg, Alison
c99e54c9-5ae3-452e-8bb1-61d332541de3
Galea, Ian
66209a2f-f7e6-4d63-afe4-e9299f156f0b

Leibowitz, Maya, Cooper, Ryan, Kaninia, Stefania, Challis, Kathryn, Greenway, William, Bonello, Maria, Elbahnasawi, Mahmoud, Shode, Deborah, Gajdasik, Dominika, Iliev, Victor, Whitelegg, Alison and Galea, Ian (2025) Real-world performance of CSF kappa free light chains in the 2024 McDonald Criteria. Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: Kappa free light chains (KFLCs) in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) have a similar performance to CSF-restricted oligoclonal bands (OCB) for multiple sclerosis (MS) diagnosis. To help with implementation, we set out to resolve several remaining uncertainties: (1) performance in a real-world cohort and the 2024 McDonald criteria; (2) equivalence to OCB in the specific clinical scenario when demonstration of intrathecal immunoglobulin synthesis is essential for MS diagnosis; (3) which KFLC metric has the best diagnostic performance.

Methods: A retrospective study of 740 cases was conducted, categorised into three groups: MS (2024 McDonald criteria), other neuroinflammatory disorders and non-inflammatory groups. CSF and serum KFLC and albumin were assayed with immunoturbidimetry. OCB status was assessed using isoelectric focusing. Eight KFLC metrics were tested: CSF KFLC, KFLC index, three population-based models of the upper limit for the CSF/serum kappa quotient corrected for CSF/serum albumin quotient, and their corresponding intrathecal fractions.

Results: The KFLC index and the KFLC intrathecal fraction performed as well as OCB; no cases were missed when KFLC was mandatory to achieve a MS diagnosis. Intrathecal fraction computation improved the performance of the population-based models.

Interpretation: In the setting of the 2024 McDonald criteria, KFLC metrics correcting for the CSF/serum albumin quotient were equivalent to OCBs. The intrathecal fraction provided no advantage over the KFLC index, which is simpler to compute. Importantly, the KFLC index can replace OCB when CSF positivity is essential for diagnosis. We provide an explanation for KFLC's comparable diagnostic performance despite its inability to identify CSF-only clones.

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Ann Clin Transl Neurol - 2026 - Leibowitz - Real‐World Performance of CSF Kappa Free Light Chains in the 2024 McDonald - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 14 December 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 508840
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508840
ISSN: 2328-9503
PURE UUID: b5972de4-a3f1-4f74-900a-7142906a9467
ORCID for Ian Galea: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1268-5102

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Date deposited: 04 Feb 2026 17:48
Last modified: 05 Feb 2026 02:38

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Contributors

Author: Maya Leibowitz
Author: Ryan Cooper
Author: Stefania Kaninia
Author: Kathryn Challis
Author: William Greenway
Author: Maria Bonello
Author: Mahmoud Elbahnasawi
Author: Deborah Shode
Author: Dominika Gajdasik
Author: Victor Iliev
Author: Alison Whitelegg
Author: Ian Galea ORCID iD

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