| Literature DB >> 31892315 |
William Ottestad1,2, Ingrid N Rognes3, Erlend Skaga3, Cassandra Frisvoll4, Guttorm Haraldsen5,6, Torsten Eken7,3, Peter Lundbäck5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: HMGB1 is a mediator of systemic inflammation in sepsis and trauma, and a promising biomarker in many diseases. There is currently no standard operating procedure for pre-analytical handling of HMGB1 samples, despite that pre-analytical conditions account for a substantial part of the overall error rate in laboratory testing. We hypothesized that the considerable variations in reported HMGB1 concentrations and kinetics in trauma patients could be partly explained by differences in pre-analytical conditions and choice of sample material.Entities:
Keywords: Blotting, western; Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; HMGB1 protein; Pre-analytical phase; Wounds and injuries
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31892315 PMCID: PMC6938620 DOI: 10.1186/s10020-019-0131-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Med ISSN: 1076-1551 Impact factor: 6.354
Characteristics of the three study populations
| Characteristics | Sample Storage patients ( | Serum vs. Plasma patients ( | Arterial vs. Venous patients ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Demographics | |||
| Sex (male: female) | 7: 3 | 3: 2 | 6: 0 |
| Age (years) | 48 (29–68; 19–78); 10 | 54 (30–55; 23–55); 5 | 35 (19–52; 17–57); 6 |
| Pre-injury ASA PS (ASA I: II: III) | 5: 3: 2 | 3: 1: 1 | 5: 0: 1 |
| Injuries | |||
| Mechanism of injury (blunt: penetrating) | 10: 0 | 4: 1 | 5: 1 |
| NISS | 34 (22–43; 12–75); 10 | 41 (22–53; 9–57); 5 | 41 (7–59; 1–66); 6 |
| ISS | 28 (20–32; 5–48); 10 | 24 (15–46; 9–57); 5 | 36 (4–49; 1–50); 6 |
| Admission BE (mmol/L) | −4.1 (− 7.3 – − 1.0; − 8.3 – 0.1); 10 | −3.4 (− 5.6 – − 2.0; − 6.2 – − 1.6); 4 | −2.3 (− 6.2–0.3; − 8.7 – 3.7); 6 |
| HMGB1 analyses | |||
| Admission HMGB1 (ng/mL)a | 6.57 (3.01–29.9; 1.68–155); 10 | 50.8 (1.88–91.2; 1.54–97.9); 5 | 13.2 (8.62–17.7; 7.31–20.4); 6 |
| Time from injury to first sample (hours)b | 3:07 (1:03–5:44; 0:39–7:26); 9 | 0:45 (0:31–2:41; 0:29–4:06); 5 | 1:41 (0:49–2:49; 0:17–3:50); 6 |
| Hospital treatment | |||
| ICU length of stay (days) | 6 (2–11; 1–17); 10 | 7 (3–9; 2–10); 5 | 6 (2–11; 2–12); 6 |
| Ventilator treatment (y: n) | 5: 5 | 2: 3 | 5: 1 |
| Outcome | |||
| Dead at 30 days (y: n) | 1: 9 | 1: 4 | 1: 5 |
| Ventilator-free days | 29 (11–30; 0–30); 10 | 30 (0–30; 0–30); 5 | 23 (17–29; 0–30); 6 |
Numbers are given as median (quartiles; range) and number of patients if not otherwise specified. NISS New Injury Severity Score, ISS Injury Severity Score, BE Base Excess, ICU intensive care unit, Ventilator-free days, days alive and off ventilator during the first 30 days after trauma. aFor “Arterial vs. Venous” group, as median concentration from first arterial sample. bTime from injury missing for one patient in “Sample Storage” group
Fig. 1Semilogarithmic plot of HMGB1 concentrations as a function of storage time in room temperature before centrifugation and freezing. Individual patients are color coded
Fig. 2Bland–Altman scatter plot of difference between previously analyzed plasma and reanalyzed plasma (a) and previously analyzed plasma and serum (b) against the average of the two measurements. Samples from individual patients are color coded
Fig. 3Raw data plot of simultaneously acquired arterial and venous samples. Horizontal axis is marked with venous (v) and arterial (a) samples at T01 (admission) and T02 (approximately 2 h after admission, see text). All samples were analyzed in quadruplicate with results reported as median concentrations. Samples from individual patients are color coded, with a solid line between simultaneously obtained median venous and arterial HMGB1 concentrations