| Literature DB >> 31413532 |
Wen-Ying Xia1, Li Gao1, Er-Hei Dai2, Dan Chen1, Er-Fu Xie1, Li Yang2, Shi-Chang Zhang1, Bing-Feng Zhang1, Jian Xu1, Shi-Yang Pan3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hepatitis B is a major public health problem in China. Accurate liver injury assessment is essential for clinical evidence-based treatment. Liver biopsy is considered the gold standard method to stage liver disease, but it is not widely used in resource-limited settings. Therefore, non-invasive liquid biopsy tests are needed. AIM: To assess liver injury in hepatitis B patients using quantified cell free DNA combined with other serum biomarker as a liquid biopsy-based method.Entities:
Keywords: Alanine aminotransferase; Duplex real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction; Hepatitis B; Liquid biopsy; plasma DNA
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31413532 PMCID: PMC6689808 DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v25.i29.3985
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Gastroenterol ISSN: 1007-9327 Impact factor: 5.742
Correlation between clinicopathological characteristics and serum alanine aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, bilirubin, albumin, plasma DNA, or hepatitis B virus DNA levels in the 350 healthy controls and 313 patients
| 350 | 19.1 (15.1) | 25.5 (17.6) | 0.0 (0.0) | 16.4 (14.3) | 46.0 (22.2) | ||||||||
| < 0.01 | 0.865 | < 0.01 | --- | < 0.01 | 0.062 | ||||||||
| Male | 250 | 22.3 (14.1) | 10.6 (5.8) | 30.0 (16.1) | 0.0 (0.0) | 19.6 (14.1) | 46.4 (20.8) | ||||||
| Female | 100 | 12.6 (7.6) | 10.2 (5.5) | 16.7 (8.1) | 0.0 (0.0) | 10.1 (5.5) | 45.5 (20.1) | ||||||
| 0.819 | 0.833 | 0.056 | --- | 0.916 | 0.066 | ||||||||
| < 36 | 175 | 18.9 (17.9) | 9.7 (5.4) | 23.6 (16.4) | 0.0 (0.0) | 16.0 (15.9) | 47.6 (20.3) | ||||||
| ≥ 36 | 175 | 19.8 (13.7) | 10.5 (5.7) | 26.8 (19.3) | 0.0 (0.0) | 16.7 (12.2) | 45.8 (23.4) | ||||||
| 0.263 | 0.439 | 0.060 | --- | 0.549 | 0.884 | ||||||||
| Negative | 166 | 18.7 (15.1) | 10.3 (5.6) | 27.3 (19.1) | 0.0 (0.0) | 15.8 (15.1) | 45.7 (22.5) | ||||||
| Positive | 184 | 19.1 (15.0) | 10.3 (5.6) | 24.2 (16.0) | 0.0 (0.0) | 16.5 (15.2) | 46.2 (21.6) | ||||||
| < 0.01 | 0.002 | 0.000 | --- | 0.000 | 0.711 | ||||||||
| No | 278 | 18.6 (12.1) | 10.4 (5.7) | 22.8 (15.5) | 0.0 (0.0) | 15.8 (11.1) | 46.1 (20.9) | ||||||
| Yes | 72 | 34.1 (29.2) | 21.0 (19.2) | 38.3 (19.0) | 0.0 (0.0) | 33.5 (27.4) | 45.4 (23.7) | ||||||
| 313 | 103.3 (118.5) | < 0.01 | 85.6 (77.2) | 0.000 | 132.9 (253.7) | < 0.01 | 6.1 (2.9) | < 0.01 | 97.0 (101.6) | < 0.01 | 42.7 (31.2) | < 0.01 | |
| 0.972 | 0.606 | 0.772 | 0.149 | 0.656 | 0.761 | ||||||||
| Male | 224 | 101.4 (114.4) | 88.3 (91.6) | 134.2 (260.2) | 6.2 (2.7) | 95.3 (99.5) | 42.4 (32.7) | ||||||
| Female | 89 | 113.5 (143.8) | 82.9 (89.1) | 132.2 (170.7) | 5.6 (2.8) | 101.7 (116.6) | 43.0 (33.2) | ||||||
| 0.011 | 0.221 | 0.312 | < 0.01 | 0.831 | 0.591 | ||||||||
| < 36 | 155 | 89.2 (120.0) | 86.3 (90.4) | 135.9 (256.6) | 6.7 (3.0) | 96.5 (98.3) | 42.2 (30.4) | ||||||
| ≥ 36 | 158 | 115.9 (124.9) | 83.9 (91.5) | 115.8 (244.5) | 5.6 (2.6) | 97.8 (103.2) | 43.1 (29.7) | ||||||
| 0.236 | 0.173 | 0.833 | < 0.01 | 0.742 | 0.070 | ||||||||
| Negative | 159 | 109.7 (126.6) | 84.4 (89.4) | 126.3 (294.0) | 5.4 (3.1) | 97.7 (101.8) | 43.3 (32.5) | ||||||
| Positive | 154 | 101.4 (117.0) | 86.1 (90.7) | 135.7 (228.9) | 6.5 (2.3) | 97.4 (99.6) | 40.6 (34.6) | ||||||
| 0.487 | 0.577 | 0.574 | 0.200 | 0.433 | 0.654 | ||||||||
| No | 187 | 107.0 (122.8) | 85.0 (87.3) | 126.3 (255.4) | 6.2 (2.7) | 95.8 (98.5) | 42.0 (30.8) | ||||||
| Yes | 126 | 100.6 (118.0) | 86.9 (90.3) | 142.8 (243.6) | 6.0 (3.0) | 98.3 (100.1) | 43.2 (30.7) |
Compared with the healthy controls. All continuous data are expressed as medians (interquartile range). ALT: Alanine aminotransferase; AST: Aspartate aminotransferase; HBV: hepatitis B virus; HBsAb: Hepatitis B surface antibody; HBeAg: Hepatitis B E-antigen.
Serum alanine aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, bilirubin, albumin, plasma DNA, and serum hepatitis B virus DNA levels in different patient groups
| 350 | 19.1 (15.1) | 25.5 (17.6) | 0.0 (0.0) | 16.4 (14.3) | 46.0 (22.2) | ||||||||
| 50 | 213.8 (355.9) | 121.6 (207.0) | 336.8 (179.5) | 5.5 (2.4) | 197.6 (312.5) | 45.4 (24.6) | |||||||
| 263 | 88.3 (98.0) | < 0.01 | 73.9 (88.3) | < 0.01 | 106.4 (174.1) | < 0.01 | 6.2 (2.9) | 0.059* | 90.6 (93.7) | < 0.01 | 40.2 (41.3) | 0.004 | |
| < 0.01 | < 0.01 | < 0.01 | 0.893 | < 0.01 | 0.444 | ||||||||
| Mild | 68 | 59.9 (41.5) | 30.6 (31.4) | 46.9 (29.5) | 5.7 (2.5) | 51.2 (50.6) | 41.7 (28.6) | ||||||
| Moderate | 70 | 62.8 (68.0) | 45.4 (50.4) | 106.1 (127.2) | 6.4 (3.1) | 61.3 (72.9) | 40.9 (30.4) | ||||||
| Marked | 83 | 152.8 (114.7) | 130 (125.5) | 141.1 (77.4) | 5.8 (2.8) | 153.2 (160.8) | 39.5 (32.6) | ||||||
| Severe | 42 | 99.9 (148.0) | 228 (254.9) | 862.5 (1213.6) | 6.8 (2.8) | 91.7 (135.1) | 39.8 (33.2) | ||||||
| 0.552 | 0.015 | < 0.01 | 0.060 | 0.121 | 0.606 | ||||||||
| No cirrhosis | 212 | 88.0 (106.4) | 65.2 (58.2) | 131.0 (235.8) | 6.3 (3.1) | 87.0 (93.0) | 40.8 (38.6) | ||||||
| Stage 0 | 59 | 83.5 (98.6) | 71.9 (70.3) | 111.8 (477.0) | 6.6 (3.0) | 87.7 (91.6) | 41.6 (38.5) | ||||||
| Stage 1 | 72 | 96.6 (81.2) | 60.2 (66.7) | 179.6 (235.3) | 6.5 (3.0) | 88.4 (90.3) | 40.1 (38.3) | ||||||
| Stage 2 | 46 | 87.4 (89.0) | 64.8 (79.6) | 98.8 (90.1) | 6.0 (2.7) | 79.1 (82.5) | 40.1 (38.7) | ||||||
| Stage 3 | 35 | 91.7 (110.3) | 77.7 (72.4) | 87.2 (77.7) | 6.0 (2.7) | 84.6 (88.0) | 40.2 (39.9) | ||||||
| Cirrhosis (Stage 4) | 51 | 91.4 (73.5) | 92.0 (99.4) | 73.1 (44.8) | 5.7 (2.1) | 91.9 (94.5) | 39.9 (43.8) |
Compared with the acute hepatitis B virus infection patients. All continuous data are expressed as medians (interquartile range). ALT: Alanine aminotransferase; AST: Aspartate aminotransferase; HBV: Hepatitis B virus.
Figure 1Correlations of blood biomarkers with severity of hepatocyte inflammation in 263 chronic hepatitis B patients. The scatter plots show that there are statistically significant correlations between the severity of hepatocyte inflammation and levels of serum biomarkers. A: Alanine aminotransferase; B: Bilirubin; C: Plasma DNA; D: Hepatitis B virus DNA. ALT: Alanine aminotransferase; HBV: Hepatitis B virus.
Figure 2The receiver operator characteristic curves of using four blood biomarkers to assess hepatocellular injury severity in 263 chronic hepatitis B patients. The areas under the curves (AUCs) of using serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT, black), bilirubin (yellow), plasma DNA (orange), serum aspartate aminotransferase (green), albumin (purple), and hepatitis B virus DNA (gray) to distinguish between patients with mild-moderate and marked-severe inflammation were 0.8059, 0.7910, 0.7921, 0.6530, 0.4877, and 0.4952, respectively. After the combination of serum ALT, bilirubin, and plasma DNA (blue), there was a statistically significant increase of AUC (0.9564). ALT: Alanine aminotransferase; HBV: Hepatitis B virus; AST: Aspartate aminotransferase; AUC: Area under the curve.
Figure 3Quantitative analysis of serum alanine aminotransferase and plasma DNA of 263 chronic hepatitis B patients to assess hepatocellular injury severity. A: The scatter plot of serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and plasma DNA levels of chronic hepatitis B patients with mild-moderate (blue dots) or marked-severe (red dots) inflammation. Most (84.0%) of the patients with high serum ALT levels (> 100.0 U/L) had marked-severe hepatocyte injury, while the other patients with marked-severe hepatocyte injury and low serum ALT levels (≤ 100.0 U/L) can be distinguished from patients with mild-moderate hepatocyte injury by plasma DNA quantification (e.g., Case 85); B: The hematoxylin and eosin stained microscopic image (× 400) of hepatic tissue of the case 85 showed severe piecemeal necrosis (marked portal inflammation) (Grade 3). ALT: alanine aminotransferase.
Figure 4Pattern diagram of liquid biopsy with serum alanine aminotransferase, bilirubin, and plasma DNA for assessment of hepatocellular injury in hepatitis B patients. Serum alanine aminotransferase levels in patients with severe hepatocellular injury may not be very high and plasma DNA combined with serum bilirubin may be a good complementary biomarker for these patients. ALT: Alanine aminotransferase.