| Literature DB >> 32098419 |
John K Yue1,2, Pavan S Upadhyayula3,4, Lauro N Avalos1, Hansen Deng5, Kevin K W Wang6.
Abstract
Background andEntities:
Keywords: blood-based biomarkers; diagnosis; magnetic resonance imaging; traumatic brain injury
Year: 2020 PMID: 32098419 PMCID: PMC7074393 DOI: 10.3390/medicina56020087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.430
Figure 1Flow Diagram of Included Articles.
Summary of Included Studies.
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| Ingebrigtsen et al., 1999 | Prospective Cohort | 50 TBI | 0.5 T magnet; T1/T2 FLAIR | Validation of S100 as a serum biomarker for brain injury. | Serum S100B | On admission and 12 h post-injury | In total, 14/50 (28%) of patients had detected serum S100 (mean 0.4 ug/L ± 0.3), with levels being highest immediately after injury and declining each hour after. S100B not detectable in 36% of patients after 6 h of initial detection. There were five MRI+ patients with brain contusions—of which have had elevated S100B. |
| Linsenmaier et al., 2016 | Prospective Cohort | 41 TBI | 1.5 T magnet; T1/T2; GRE; DWI | Feasibility study of S100B as biomarker in mTBI with MRI. | Serum S100B CT; MRI | Hourly, until 12 h post-injury | In total, 27/32 (84%) of patients with very high serum S100B serum were MRI-negative and 4/27 with high S100B were CT+. Five MRI+ patients had elevated S100B. S100B sensitivity 100% with specificity of 81%. |
| Marchi et al., 2013 | Prospective Cohort | 15 athletes | 3 T magnet; DTI | Serum S100B in college football players with MRI. | Serum S100B; MRI; neurocognitive tests | Before and after sports season | S100B post-game was elevated (0.51 ± 0.05 ng/mL) compared to baseline. Higher number of impacts correlated with increased S100B ( |
| Oh et al., 2007 | Prospective Cohort | 101 TBI | unspecified | Serum S100B in patients admitted to EDt for TBI with CT/MRI. | Serum S100B; CT; MRI | On admission | Healthy controls had serum S100B 0.080 ug/L (0.049–0.094) compared to 0.150 ug/L (0.088–0.358) in acute TBI. 66/101 CT/MRI+ patients had higher S100B compared to CT/MRI-negative ( |
| Romner et al., 2000 | Prospective Cohort | 278 TBI | unspecified | Neurotrauma patients were evaluated for S100B levels on admission and compared with pathological findings on CT scan. | Serum S100B; CT; MRI | On admission | 108/278 (39%) had elevated serum S100 and 25 (9%) were CT+. Serum S100B was higher in severe compared to mild-to-moderate TBI ( |
| Thelin et al., 2014 | Retrospective Cohort | 199 TBI | T1/T2; FLAIR; GRE | An analysis of serum increases in S100B levels post-TBI in addition to pathological imaging. | Serum S100B; CT; MRI | Three samples, with 1/3 taken > 48 h after injury | Secondary increases in S100B with a cutoff of 0.05 ug/L had sensitivity 80% and specificity 89%, while cutoff of 0.5 ug/L has sensitivity 16% and specificity 98% for imaging findings of TBI. |
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| Gill et al., 2018 | Prospective Cohort | 277 mTBI | T1/T2; FLAIR; 3D-T1; DTI | Plasma biomarkers were correlated with MRI data. | Plasma GFAP; tau; NFL; UCH-L1 | Within 48 h of injury | mTBI had higher plasma GFAP, tau, and NF-L ( |
| Kou et al., 2013 | Prospective Cohort | Nine mTBI | 3 T magnet; T1/T2; GRE; FLAIR; DTI | Feasibility testing of the utilization of both biomarkers and MRI to detect mTBI. | Serum UCH-L1 and GFAP levels; MRI data | Within 6 h of injury, and q6 h until 24 h post-injury | UCH-L1 (4.9-fold) and GFAP (10.6-fold) were elevated on admission in comparison to lab reference values. Patients with intracranial hemorrhages had higher GFAP compared to non-hemorrhage ( |
| McMahon et al., 2015 | Prospective Cohort | 215 TBI | unspecified | Plasma GFAP-BDPs were used to predict CT/MRI+ TBI. | Plasma GFAP-BDPs; MRI | Within 24 h of injury | In total, 35% had evidence of TBI on MRI ( |
| Posti et al., 2017 | Prospective Cohort | 94 mTBI | 3 T magnet; T1/T2; FLAIR; DTI; 3D-T1 | Plasma GFAP, UCH-L1 in TBI were compared to orthopedic trauma. | Serum GFAP and UCH-L1; CT/MRI | On days 1,2,3,7 post-admission | None in the mTBI group showed signs of TBI on MRI. GFAP was initially higher in acute orthopedic trauma compared to acute CT−/MRI− mTBI ( |
| Yue et al., 2019 | Prospective Cohort | 450 TBI, 122 orthopedic and 207 healthy controls | T1/T2; FLAIR; GRE | Patients with negative initial CT, with MRI at 7–18 days, vs. orthopedic trauma controls and healthy controls. | Plasma GFAP and MRI | Within 24 h of injury | CT−/MRI+ (414.5 pg/mL; |
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| Hirad et al., 2019 | Retrospective Cohort | 29 mTBI | 3 T magnet; 3D-T1; DTI | NCAA contact sport athletes with mTBI were monitored for concussion with plasma sampling and cognitive testing pre-/post-season. | White matter structural integrity using FA pre- and post-season, vs. age-matched controls, correlation between plasma tau and midbrain FA | Before and after sports season; mTBI patients had venipuncture within 72 h of injury | FA reduced in the right midbrain in concussed athletes compared to controls. Of 13/29 mTBI patients with blood samples, Tau was inversely related to midbrain FA ( |
| Tomita et al., 2019 | Prospective Observational | 40 TBI | T2 FLAIR; DWI | TBI patients with acute symptoms < 6 h and patients with MRI evidence of DAI on T2WI/DWI regardless of symptoms. | Serum tau in DAI vs. non-DAI groups; sensitivity and specificity of Tau for DAI | Within 6 h of injury | All patients had high intensity areas on MRI within corpus callosum, brainstem and cerebrum with T2WI/DWI. Tau was higher in DAI (25.3 pg/mL; 0–99.1) vs. non-DAI (0.0 pg/mL; 0–44.4). At cutoff 1.5 pg/mL, sensitivity 74.1% and specificity 69.2% for DAI. |
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| Ljungqvist et al., 2017 | Prospective Cohort | Nine TBI | 1.5 T; T1/T2; DTI | Serum NF-L levels in severe TBI patients were correlated with MRI and health outcomes. | Serum NF-L; MRI; GOSE | Within 24 h | All patients had DAI on MRI. NF-L ranged from 87.5–851.6 pg/mL. Severely disabled patients (GOSE 3–4) had higher serum NF-L (411 ± 263) than moderate (GOSE 5–6; 277 ± 80; |
| Al Nimer et al., 2015 | Prospective Cohort | 182 TBI | echo-planar diffusion; FLAIR; GRE; T1/T2 | Serum and CSF-NF-L levels were assessed in relation to imaging and outcomes. | Serum NF-L; CT; MRI; GCS; mortality | Sampled twice daily | In total, 159/182 patients survived, outcome data were available for 73% (116/159), GCS scores over time were significantly correlated with serum NF-L ( |
| Sandsmark et al., 2019 | Prospective Cohort | 30 controls, 56 TBI | 1.5 T; T1/T2; SWI; DTI; FLAIR; GRE | Presence of traumatic hemorrhage or traumatic vascular injury correlated with serum NF-H. | Serum NF-H; MRI; GOS-E | Within 48 h of injury | Plasma NF-H was increased in both the traumatic hemorrhage and traumatic vascular injury groups compared to the MRI-negative group ≤ 48 h from injury and continued to stay increased in traumatic vascular injury cohort even 48 h after injury. |
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| Ye et al., 2019 | Prospective cohort | 52 | FLAIR; SWI; 3D-T1 | Comparison of serum a-synuclein levels and brain connectivity in mTBI patients. | Serum a-synuclein; fMRI; PCS | On admission | All patients were CT-negative. Low levels of a-synuclein were associated with more severe PCS symptoms ( |
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| Dambinova et al., 2013 | Prospective cohort | 33 Concussion | 1.5 T magnet; T1/T2 FLAIR | AMPAR peptide was measured in healthy controls and athletes with concussion to study its feasibility as a biomarker for TBI. | Serum AMPAR; MRI | On admission and again within 6 months of injury | AMPAR levels in controls were 0.05–0.40 ng/mL and 1.0–8.5 ng/mL in concussed athletes. AMPAR as a biomarker had a sensitivity of 91% and specificity 92% with 0.4 ng/mL cuff-off. Athletes having experienced multiple concussions had increased AMPAR levels (2.0–12.0 ng/mL) which was associated with MRI findings, though minor. |
Caption: AMPAR = a-amitio-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor; CSF = cerebrospinal fluid; CT = computed tomography; DAI = diffuse axonal injury; DWI = diffusion-weighted imaging; ED = emergency department; FA = fractional anisotropy; GFAP = glial fibrillary acidic protein; GFAP-BDP = glial fibrillary acidic protein breakdown products; GOS = Glasgow Outcome Scale; GOSE = Glasgow Outcome Scale-Extended; MRI = magnetic resonance imaging; NCAA = National Collegiate Athletic Association; NF-L = neurofilament light chain; PCS = post-concussional symptoms; T2WI = T2-weighted imaging; TBI = traumatic brain injury; UCH-L1 = ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase L1; GRE = gradient echo; DTI = diffusion tensor imaging; 3D-T1 = 3-dimensional T1; DTI = Diffusion Tractography Imaging; FLAIR = Fluid Attenuated Infusion Recovery.