| Literature DB >> 29677216 |
Massimo S Fiandaca1,2,3, Mark Mapstone1, Amin Mahmoodi1, Thomas Gross1, Fabio Macciardi1,4, Amrita K Cheema5,6, Kian Merchant-Borna7, Jeffrey Bazarian7, Howard J Federoff1.
Abstract
Past and recent attempts at devising objective biomarkers for traumatic brain injury (TBI) in both blood and cerebrospinal fluid have focused on abundance measures of time-dependent proteins. Similar independent determinants would be most welcome in diagnosing the most common form of TBI, mild TBI (mTBI), which remains difficult to define and confirm based solely on clinical criteria. There are currently no consensus diagnostic measures that objectively define individuals as having sustained an acute mTBI. Plasma metabolomic analyses have recently evolved to offer an alternative to proteomic analyses, offering an orthogonal diagnostic measure to what is currently available. The purpose of this study was to determine whether a developed set of metabolomic biomarkers is able to objectively classify college athletes sustaining mTBI from non-injured teammates, within 6 hours of trauma and whether such a biomarker panel could be effectively applied to an independent cohort of TBI and control subjects. A 6-metabolite panel was developed from biomarkers that had their identities confirmed using tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) in our Athlete cohort. These biomarkers were defined at ≤6 hours following mTBI and objectively classified mTBI athletes from teammate controls, and provided similar classification of these groups at the 2, 3, and 7 days post-mTBI. The same 6-metabolite panel, when applied to a separate, independent cohort provided statistically similar results despite major differences between the two cohorts. Our confirmed plasma biomarker panel objectively classifies acute mTBI cases from controls within 6 hours of injury in our two independent cohorts. While encouraged by our initial results, we expect future studies to expand on these initial observations.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29677216 PMCID: PMC5909890 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0195318
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Collegiate Athlete cohort and external validation cohort demographics.
| Cohorts ( | Athlete (62) | External (84) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Groups ( | mTBI (38) | NC (24) | TBI-Washington (22) | TBI-Maryland (9) | NC-Army (53) |
| 22/16 | 9/15 | 18/4 | 8/1 | 24/29 | |
| 18.0–22.9/19.2 | 18.0–21.6/18.7 | 19.0–35.0/27.3 | 19.0–35.0/26.8 | 18.0–35.0/27.7 | |
| 19.3/19.1 | 18.6/18.8 | 27.8/25.0 | 26.3/31.0 | 26.1/27.7 | |
| College Athlete | College Athlete | Civilian ER | Civilian ER | Military | |
Athlete = college athlete cohort. TBI = traumatic brain injury; mTBI = mild TBI; NC = non-concussed controls; Washington = Washington Hospital Center; Maryland = University of Maryland Shock Trauma Center; Army = NORMAL study; ER = emergency room.
External validation cohort—TBI severity and time to blood draw.
| mTBI | mTBI* | Moderate TBI | Moderate TBI* | Severe TBI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2 | |
| Mean time to blood draw (hrs. ± SEM) | 15.7±2.8 | 13.4±3.2 | 32.9±8.5 | 34.4±4.6 | 23.9±11.0 |
| 7 | 2 | ||||
| Mean time to blood draw (hrs. ± SEM) | 126.9±33.0 | 204.0±12.0 | |||
TBI = traumatic brain injury. mTBI = mild TBI. Washington = Washington Hospital Center. SEM = standard error of the mean. Maryland = University of Maryland Shock Trauma Center. mTBI* or TBI* = With MRI abnormality present.
Discrepant best preliminary analyte panels between athlete and external cohorts.
| Linear SVM 10 | LASSO 10 |
|---|---|
| LysoPI a C20:5_N | 13-HODE_N |
| PS aa C42:6_N | LysoPA a C22:6_P |
| 13-HODE_N | DAG aa C33:2_P |
| FA C18:0_N | PG ae C33:3_P |
| AC16:2_P | LysoPC a C20:4_P |
| FA 2-OH C16:0_N | PC ae C34:4_N |
| LysoPA a C16:0_N | TUDCA_N |
| LysoPA a C15:1_N | FA C28:7 n-6_P |
| Asparagine_N | PE ae C36:4_N |
| Carnosine_ N | PE aa C38:6_N |
Shaded cells indicate preliminary annotated analytes common to both Athlete and External cohorts from the original 10-metabolite panels derived using Linear SVM and LASSO feature selection. SVM = support vector machine. LASSO = least absolute shrinkage and selection operator. AC = acylcarnitine. DG = diacylglycerol. FA = fatty acid. LysoPA = lysophosphatidic acid. LysoPC = lysophosphatidylcholine. LysoPI = lysophosphatidylinositol. PC = phosphatidylcholine. PE = phosphatidylethanolamine. PS = phosphatidylserine. TUDCA = tauroursodeoxycholic acid. HODE = hydroxyoctadecadienoic acid. Note that 13-HODE_N is present in both original panels.
Comparison of unmatched and matched biomarker panel results between Athlete and external cohorts.
| Feature Selection Method | Number of analytes in panel ( | Athlete Cohort Training/Discovery | Athlete Cohort | External Cohort | Hanley- McNeil Test Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | |||||
| 6 | |||||
| 10 | |||||
| 8 | |||||
| 6 | |||||
Shaded areas highlight same row comparison group results used to test the null hypothesis (H0) via the Hanley-McNeal Test, that no significant difference exist between CAC and EVC ROC AUC results. Training/Discovery = uses logistic regression analysis. CI = confidence interval. ROC AUC = receiver operating characteristic area under the curve. sens/spec = sensitivity/specificity. Internal Validation = uses logistic regression with 10-fold cross validation analysis. Replication = uses logistic regression analysis, similar to Training/Discovery. MS/MS = preliminary metabolites from Linear SVM 6 and LASSO 8 panels definitively confirmed using tandem mass spectroscopy (MS/MS). z = Hanley-McNeil Test statistic. p = 2-tailed level of significance. Statistical significance considered if p <0.05.
Final MS/MS-confirmed biomarker panel analyte details.
| Analyte | FA 2-OH C16:0 | FA C18:0 | TUDCA | PE ae C36:4 | PE aa C38:6 | LysoPC a C20:4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2-hydroxypalmitic acid; 2-hydroxy-hexadecanoic acid | Stearic acid; Octadecanoic acid | Tauroursodeoxy-cholic Acid | PE (P-16:0/20:4); | PE (16:0/22:6); Diacyl-Phosphatidyl-ethanolamine | PC (20:4/0:0); Lyso-phosphatidylcholine | |
| NEG | NEG | NEG | NEG | NEG | POS | |
| Down | Up | Down | Up | Down | Up | |
| 271.2266 | 283.2629 | 498.2936 | 722.513 | 762.5081 | 544.3411 | |
| 272.235 | 284.272 | 499.2968 | 723.5203 | 763.5152 | 543.3325 | |
| 92836 | 5281 | 9848818 | 52925126 | 9546799 | 24779476 | |
| HMDB31057 | HMDB00827 | HMDB00874 | HMDB11352 | HMDB08946 | HMDB10395 | |
| LMFA01050047 | LMFA01010018 | LMST05040015 | LMGP02030093 | LMGP02010095 | LMGP01050048 |
Biomarkers derived from the Athlete cohort and replicated in the External cohort. MS/MS = tandem mass spectrometry. FA = fatty acid. Phospholipid designations include: typically, ae = ether bond (e) at sn1 position and ester acyl bond (a) at sn2 position. Ether bonds are either alkyl (ether, O-) or alkenyl (plasmalogen, P-). Lipid species nomenclature features C (number of carbons):(number of double bonds). Phospholipids feature glycerol conjugated fatty acyl, alkyl, or alkenyl species designated to sn1/sn2 positions (e.g., C16:0(sn1)/22:6(sn2)). ESI = electrospray ionization mode. TBI = traumatic brain injury. m/z = mass/charge. HMDB ID = The Human Metabolome Database identification (www.hmdb.ca). Pubchem ID = Open Chemistry Database identification (https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/). LM ID = Lipid Maps Lipidomics Gateway identification (www.lipidmaps.org).