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Abstract Details

Uncovering Hidden Profiles: From Pain-centric to Multi-symptom Small Fiber Neuropathy
Pain
P8 - Poster Session 8 (11:45 AM-12:45 PM)
14-002

To (1) robustly characterize the clinical spectrum of small fiber neuropathy (SFN) using quantitative, data-driven phenotyping to capture its full multidimensional symptom burden, and (2) identify reproducible, biologically meaningful patient subgroups that can inform mechanistic study and clinical treatment. 

SFN is a progressive, disabling disorder affecting small peripheral nerve fibers. While SFN is classically defined by distal neuropathic pain and sensory loss, many patients experience additional symptoms - including myalgias, fatigue, subjective weakness, and neuropathic itch.  However, the prevalence and intensity of these symptoms remains poorly defined. Current treatments—focused primarily on pain—are often ineffective, possibly reflecting the clinical heterogeneity of the disorder.

Demographic, clinical, and laboratory data were analyzed from patients with skin biopsy-confirmed SFN (n = 203) and healthy controls (n = 30). Patients rated symptom intensity (0–10) across sensory, motor, and fatigue domains. Unsupervised clustering was applied to identify data-driven subgroups. Cluster reproducibility was quantified using the Adjusted Rand Index (ARI).

The clustering model demonstrated high stability (ARI = 0.80). Fatigue—not neuropathic pain—was the most prevalent and severe symptom in SFN. Unsupervised analysis identified three reproducible clinical phenotypes. The algesic group (~20%) exhibited severe neuropathic pain with high co-occurrence of fatigue and myalgias. The myalgic group (~60%) demonstrated predominant fatigue and muscle-related symptoms that exceeded pain in both prevalence and severity. The pauci-symptomatic group (~20%) reported few symptoms of mild-to-moderate intensity. Clusters differed significantly in total symptom burden, disease duration, intraepidermal nerve fiber density, sex distribution, and body mass index.

This study challenges the pain-centric paradigm of SFN revealing fatigue and muscle symptoms as dominant and meaningful dimensions of disease. The identification of robust, data-driven phenotypes provides a foundation for mechanistic stratification, biomarker discovery, and development of precision therapies in SFN and related neuropathies.

Authors/Disclosures
Peyton Murin, MD (Saint Louis University- SLUCare Academic Pavilion)
PRESENTER
The institution of Dr. Murin has received research support from 好色先生.
Nicholas Schulze Mr. Schulze has nothing to disclose.
Vivian D. Gao Ms. Gao has nothing to disclose.
Manouela Valtcheva, MD (Washington University School of Medicine, Neurology Department) An immediate family member of Dr. Valtcheva has received personal compensation for serving as an employee of Millipore-Sigma. An immediate family member of Dr. Valtcheva has received personal compensation for serving as an employee of Pfizer. An immediate family member of Dr. Valtcheva has stock in Pfizer.
Stefanie Geisler, MD (Washington University Saint Louis) The institution of Dr. Geisler has received research support from NIH. The institution of Dr. Geisler has received research support from Foundation for Peripheral Neuropathy. Dr. Geisler has received intellectual property interests from a discovery or technology relating to health care. An immediate family member of Dr. Geisler has received publishing royalties from a publication relating to health care.