Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a rare autosomal recessive neuromuscular disease. Nusinersen sodium (NS) is the world's first antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) drug for SMA precise targeted therapy. However, the limited half-life of oligonucleotides and their tendency to accumulate in hepatic and renal tissues presented significant challenges for clinical investigation and therapeutic drug monitoring. In this study, we proposed an analytical strategy based on the specific capture of oligonucleotide functionalized fluorescent probes by single stranded binding proteins (SSB) for ultra-sensitive and high-throughput detection of nusinersen sodium in human serum. The magnetic nanoparticles modified with single-strand binding protein (MNPs-SSB) selectively bonded to the red fluorescent quantum dots functionalized with oligonucleotides (RQDs-ssDNA) that were complementary to nusinersen sodium. Upon interaction with nusinersen sodium, RQDs-ssDNA formed a double-stranded complex (RQDs-ssDNA-NS), resulting in enhanced red fluorescence after magnetic separation as it was no longer captured by MNPs-SSB but remained in the supernatant. A quantitative analysis of nusinersen sodium in biological samples was successfully achieved by establishing a relationship between fluorescence intensity and its concentration. The detection signal F/F0 exhibited a linear correlation (R2 = 0.9871) over a wide range from 0.1 nM to 200 nM, with a limit of detection (LOD) of 0.03 nM, demonstrating the high specificity and rapid analysis time (only 30 min). This method provided a novel approach for sensitive, high-throughput, and specific analysis of nusinersen sodium and similar ASO drugs.