| Literature DB >> 35008742 |
Tae Hoon Kim1, Seung Geun Yeo1, Jae Yong Byun1.
Abstract
Acute peripheral facial palsy (APFP), including Bell's palsy and Ramsay Hunt syndrome, is a disease that affects daily life through facial motor dysfunction, causing psychological problems. Various tests to evaluate prognosis have been studied; however, there are no validated predictive biomarkers to guide clinical decision making. Therefore, specific biomarkers that respond to treatment are required to understand prognostic outcomes. In this review, we discuss existing literature regarding the role of APFP biomarkers in prognosis and recovery. We searched the PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane Library databases for relevant papers. Our screening identified relevant studies and biomarkers correlating with the identification of predictive biomarkers. Only studies published between January 2000 and October 2021 were included. Our search identified 5835 abstracts, of which 35 were selected. All biomarker samples were obtained from blood and were used in the evaluation of disease severity and prognosis associated with recovery. These biomarkers have been effective prognostic or predictive factors under various conditions. Finally, we classified them into five categories. There is no consensus in the literature on the correlation between outcomes and prognostic factors for APFP. Furthermore, the correlation between hematologic laboratory values and APFP prognosis remains unclear. However, it is important to identify new methods for improving the accuracy of facial paralysis prognosis prediction. Therefore, we systematically evaluated prognostic and potentially predictive APFP biomarkers. Unfortunately, a predictive biomarker validating APFP prognosis remains unknown. More prospective studies are required to reveal and identify promising biomarkers providing accurate prognosis.Entities:
Keywords: Bell’s palsy; Ramsay Hunt syndrome; acute peripheral facial palsy; biomarkers; prognosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35008742 PMCID: PMC8745072 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23010307
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Diagram showing selection of studies for review.
Figure 2Diagram illustrating the review biomarkers.
Summary of prognostic biomarkers for acute peripheral facial palsy (Inflammatory parameter).
| Author (Year) | Study Design | Sample Size | Age (years) | Biomarkers | Results/Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shang et al. (2021) [ | Retrospective | 311 patients | 39.7 ± 11.8 (Mean) | Albumin | The serum albumin level of patients with BP in the unrecovered group was significantly lower than that of the recovered group |
| Cayir et al. (2021) [ | Retrospective | 59 patients, | 10.69 ± 5.76, 10.87 ± 3.22 (Mean) | WBC, NLR, PLR, CAR | High NLR and CAR values in pediatric BP may be related to poor prognosis in such patients. CAR, however, is a more valuable parameter than NLR in terms of indicating poor prognosis |
| Kim et al. (2020) [ | Retrospective | 84 patients | 47 ± 14.35 (Mean) | ELR, NLR, BLR | A higher pretreatment NLR and neutrophil count and a lower day-7 lymphocyte count were observed in patients with RHS with unfavorable outcomes. In patients with BP, both the initial HB grade and the pretreatment eosinophil count were included |
| Baklacı et al. (2020) [ | Retrospective | 76 patients, 60 controls | 39.76 ± 9.02, 39.31 ± 8.16 (Mean) | NLR, PLR | Mean LDH concentrations and NLR were significantly high in BP group than in control group |
| Cayir et al. (2020) [ | Retrospective, archival, cross-sectional study | 79 patients (23 non recovery group patients, 56 recovery group patients), 60 controls | 49 ± 3 (Non recovery), 49 ± 3 (Recovery), 50 ± 3 (Controls) | WBC, CRP, neutrophil, lymphocyte, NLR, CAR, PLR | Higher CAR and NLR were associated with poor prognosis in BP. CAR might be the most significant indicator of poor prognosis in BP |
| Kınar et al. (2020) [ | Retrospective | 88 patients,50 controls | 54,47 (Mean) | Neutrophil, lymphocytes, NLR, PLR | Patient group had higher neutrophil counts and higher SII and NLR values than the control group. Among BP patients, the SII values of the unrecovered group were statistically higher than those of the recovered group |
| Aysel et al. (2020) [ | Retrospective | 47 patients | 14.7 ± 2.5 | NLR, TLR | NLR in patients with advanced grades (grade 4, 5, 6) was higher, compared to that of patients with grade 2 and 3. NLR at admission can be considered as a prognostic factor |
| Demir et al. (2020) [ | Prospective | 92 patients, 90 Controls | 38 ± 9.5, 41.7 ± 17.2 (Mean) | Cyclophilin A | Low CyPA indicates the shorter average recovery time than that of high CyPA |
| Kim et al. (2020) [ | Retrospective | 54 patients, 39 controls | 14.5 ± 4.1, 11.9 ± 5.2 (Mean) | NLR, PLR | The NLR and PLR values in the BP group were significantly higher than in the control group. However, there were no significant differences between the low-grade and high-grade BP groups nor were there any statically significant differences in the other characteristics. |
| Kim et al. (2019) [ | Retrospective | 51 patients | 39.7 ± 20.1 (Mean) | WBC, NLR, PLR | NLR was significantly higher in patients with severe than with mild to moderate palsy. Recovery time was significantly longer in patients with high NLR than low NLR |
| Soh et al. (2019) [ | Retrospective | 102 patients | 45.1 ± 16 | NLR, PLR | The HBS grade of the high-NLR group was significantly higher than that of the normal-NLR group. Patients with RHS who have an elevated NLR have poor outcomes in terms of the HBS grade |
| Karatoprak et al. (2019) [ | Retrospective | 102 patients | 10.37 ± 4.2 (Mean) | NLR | NLR and RDW were not found to be predictive factors for early recovery |
| Ulusoy et al. (2018) [ | Prospective | 24 patients, 29 controls | 45.12 ± 12.34, 44.34 ± 9.97 (Mean) | NLR, PLR | There was no correlation between the NLR value and the prognosis of Bell’s Palsy. A comparison of the recovered and unrecovered patients revealed that the PDW value was significantly higher and the platelet count was lower in the recovered patients than the unrecovered patients |
| Horibe et al. | Retrospective | 61 patients | 16-50 years | NLR | RDW can predict recovery from BP in patients aged 50 years and less |
| Wasano et al. (2017) [ | Retrospective | 468 patients (BP 374, RHS 94) | BP Mean 51.7 ± 14.18.8 (recovered), 57.6 ± 16.6 (unrecovered) | NLR, Monocyte rate | Palsy Prognosis Prediction scores (PPP score) are useful for predicting prognosis of facial palsy before beginning treatment |
| Sahin et al. (2017) [ | Retrospective | 28 patients, 28 controls | 29.5 ± 10.5 (Mean) | NLR, PLR | Significant changes were not observed in NLR, PLR, MPV and RDW measurements in BP group between HBS |
| Kilicaslan et al. (2016) [ | Prospective | 54 patients (32 low-grade group & 22 high-grade group), 35 controls | Mean BP 39.1 ± 14.2 (Low-grade), 36.9 ± 15.9 (high-grade), 38.6 ± 18.1 (Controls) | Procalcitonin | Procalcitonin levels were significantly associated with the severity of BP and higher PCT levels were found to be related with poor prognosis |
| Wasano et al. (2016) [ | Retrospective | 468 patients | Mean BP 51.7 ± 14.18.8 (recovered), 57.6 ± 16.6 (unrecovered) | NLR, WBC | In the BP group, neutrophil rate, lymphocyte rate, NLR of recovered patients were significantly different than those of unrecovered patients. In RHS group monocyte rate, platelet count, MCV of recovered patients were significantly different than those of unrecovered patients |
| Kiliçkaya, et al. (2015) [ | Retrospective | 146 patients, | HBS grade I–II (38.9 ± 22.77), HBS grade III–IV (36.04 ± 21.77), HBS grade V-VI (42.30 ± 17.43) (Mean) | NLR | As the severity of the paralysis increased in the APFP patients in this study, the NLR value increased. the NLR value can be used as an early predictive prognostic factor of IPFP |
| Eryilmaz et al. (2015) [ | Retrospective | 25 patients, | 9.86 ± 5.07, 9.14 ± 5.94 (Mean) | NLR | NLR and pretreatment HBS showed no statistically significant correlation |
| Atan et al. (2015) [ | Retrospective | 99 patients, | 47.84 ± 16.94, | NLR, PLR | No statistically significant relation was detected between the degree of facial paralysis and NLR and PLR |
| Kum et al. (2014) [ | Retrospective | 65 patients, | 45 ± 3.2, | NLR | There was a positive and significant correlation between NLR and HBS of the patients. MPV did not show any significant correlation with any of the parameters studied |
| Özler, et al. (2014) [ | Prospective | 25 patients, | 40.7 ± 12.3, | NLR | A positive correlation between NLR values and grade of facial paralysis |
| Bucak et al. (2013) [ | Retrospective | 54 patients, | 43.11 ± 18.12, 48.33 ± 5.65 (Mean) | NLR | The mean NLR levels were higher in unsatisfactory recovered patients compared with satisfactory recovered ones |
Summary of prognostic biomarkers for acute peripheral facial palsy (Metabolic parameter).
| Author (Year) | Study Design | Sample Size | Age (years) | Biomarkers | Results/Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baklacı et al. (2020) [ | Retrospective | 76 patients, | 39.76 ± 9.02, 39.31 ± 8.16 (Mean) | LDH | Mean LDH concentrations and NLR were significantly high in BP group than in control group |
| KARAGÖZ et al. (2020) [ | Prospective | 86 patients, | 41, 38 (Mean) | IR, HOMA-IR | The patients with higher HOMA-IR values had more severe facial dysfunction at the initial presentation and complete recovery time took longer than the patients with normal HOMA-IR value. Recovery time was significantly longer in prediabetics and newly diagnosed diabetic patients than in patients with normal glycemia |
| Jung et al. (2018) [ | Retrospective | 124 patients | 52.16 ± 14.17 (Mean) | TG, HDL-C | The recovery rate of BP was significantly lower in the MetS group than in the Non-MetS group, particularly affected by high TG |
| Wasano et al. (2016) [ | Retrospective | 468 patients | Mean BP 51.7 ± 14.18.8 (recovered), 57.6 ± 16.6 (unrecovered) Mean RHS 50.8 ± 18.7 (recovered), 50.5 ± 18.0 (unrecovered) | HbA1c | In the BP group, neutrophil rate, lymphocyte rate, NLR of recovered patients were significantly different than those of unrecovered patients. In RHS group monocyte rate, platelet count, MCV of recovered patients were significantly different than those of unrecovered patients |
| Riga et al. (2012) [ | Prospective | 56 patients | 54 ± 31.7 (Mean) | HbA1c | The 20 patients with abnormal HbA1c values were more frequently diagnosed with BP of grade V/VI. However, their HBS were not found to be worse at the 6-month follow-up visit |
| Kanazawa et al. (2007) [ | Prospective | 76 patients | 64.6 ± 8.5 (Diabetic group), 61.3 ± 8.5 (Nondiabetic group) (Mean) | HbA1c | Facial movement in the DG was poorer than that in the NDG at 3 months and 6 months after onset. In terms of the recovery rate, the rate in the DG was much lower than that in the NDG at 6 months after onset |
Summary of prognostic biomarkers for acute peripheral facial palsy (Hemostatic parameter).
| Author (Year) | Study Design | Sample Size | Age (years) | Biomarkers | Results/Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cayir et al. (2021) [ | Retrospective | 59 patients, | 10.69 ± 5.76, | MPV, Hbg, RDW | High NLR and CAR values in pediatric BP may be related to poor prognosis in such patients. CAR, however, is a more valuable parameter than NLR in terms of indicating poor prognosis |
| Baklacı et al. (2020) [ | Retrospective | 76 patients, | 39.76 ± 9.02, 39.31 ± 8.16 (Mean) | MPV | Mean LDH concentrations and NLR were significantly high in BP group than in control group |
| Cayir et al. (2020) [ | Retrospective, archival, cross-sectional study | 79 patients (23 non recovery group patients, 56 recovery group patients), 60 controls | 49 ± 3 (Non recovery), 49 ± 3 (Recovery), 50 ± 3 (Controls) | Platelet, Hbg | Higher CAR and NLR were associated with poor prognosis in BP. CAR might be the most significant indicator of poor prognosis in BP |
| Kınar et al. (2020) [ | Retrospective | 88 patients, | 54, | Platelet | Patient group had higher neutrophil counts and higher SII and NLR values than the control group. Among BP patients, the SII values of the unrecovered group were statistically higher than those of the recovered group |
| Aysel et al. (2020) [ | Retrospective | 47 patients | 14.7 ± 2.5 | MPV | NLR in patients with advanced grades (grade 4, 5, 6) was higher, compared to that of patients with grade 2 and 3. NLR at admission can be considered as a prognostic factor |
| Kim et al. (2020) [ | Retrospective | 54 patients, | 14.5 ± 4.1, | MPV, RDW | The NLR and PLR values in the BP group were significantly higher than in the control group. However, there were no significant differences between the low-grade and high-grade BP groups nor were there any statically significant differences in the other characteristics. |
| Kim et al. (2019) [ | Retrospective | 51 patients | 39.7 ± 20.1 (Mean) | Platelet | NLR was significantly higher in patients with severe than with mild to moderate palsy. Recovery time was significantly longer in patients with high NLR than low NLR |
| Ulusoy et al. (2018) [ | Prospective | 24 patients, | 45.12 ± 12.34, | PDW, platelet | There was no correlation between the NLR value and the prognosis of Bell’s Palsy. A comparison of the recovered and unrecovered patients revealed that the PDW value was significantly higher and the platelet count was lower in the recovered patients than the unrecovered patients |
| Horibe et al. | Retrospective | 61 patients | 16–50 years | MPV, RDW | RDW can predict recovery from BP in patients aged 50 years and less |
| Wasano et al. (2017) [ | Retrospective | 468 patients | BP Mean 51.7 ± 14.18.8 (recovered), 57.6 ± 16.6 (unrecovered) | Platelet, MCV | Palsy Prognosis Prediction scores (PPP score) are useful for predicting prognosis of facial palsy before beginning treatment |
| Sahin et al. (2017) [ | Retrospective | 28 patients, | 29.5 ± 10.5 (Mean) | MPV, RDW | Significant changes were not observed in NLR, PLR, MPV and RDW measurements in BP group between HBS |
| Zhao et al. (2016) [ | Retrospective | 105 patients, | Fibrinogen | The plasma fibrinogen concentration was significantly higher in the group of patients with BP (HBS IV-VI) than the in the control group. The plasma fibrinogen levels became higher with the HBS grading increase | |
| Wasano et al. (2016) [ | Retrospective | 468 patients | Mean BP 51.7 ± 14.18.8 (recovered), 57.6 ± 16.6 (unrecovered) | Platelet, Hbg, MCV | In the BP group, neutrophil rate, lymphocyte rate, NLR of recovered patients were significantly different than those of unrecovered patients. In RHS group monocyte rate, platelet count, MCV of recovered patients were significantly different than those of unrecovered patients |
| Özler, et al. (2014) [ | Prospective | 30 patients, | 39.9 ± 10.68, 37.1 ± 6.91 (Mean) | MPV, PDW, platelet | There was positive correlation between MPV values and grade of facial paralysis. Also, there was positive correlation between PDW values and grade of facial paralysis. In contrast, there was no correlation between MPV and PDW values and prognosis of facial paralysis |
| Kum et al. (2014) [ | Retrospective | 65 patients, | 45 ± 3.2, | MPV | There was a positive and significant correlation between NLR and HBS of the patients. MPV did not show any significant correlation with any of the parameters studied |
Summary of prognostic biomarkers for acute peripheral facial palsy (Immunologic parameter).
| Author (Year) | Study Design | Sample Size | Age (years) | Biomarkers | Results/Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kaygusuz et al. (2004) [ | Prospective | 30 patients, | 38.7 ± 15.3 (Mean) | TNF-α, IFN-γ, TGF-β, CD3+, CD4+, CD8+, CD19+, CD16+ plus 56+ | CD4+ cell and ratio of CD4+/CD8+ lower and the percentage of the CD8+ and CD16+ plus 56+ cells higher compared with the control group. The levels of TNF-α were lower, whereas IFN-γ and TGF-β1 were higher |
| Tekgul et al. | Prospective | 17 patients, | 7.82 ± 4.41, | Immunologic parameters (total T cells (CD3+), B cells (CD19+), T helper/inducer cells (CD4+), T cytotoxic (CD8+), and natural killer cells (CD16+ CD56+) | We did not find any prognostic significance of lymphocyte subset analysis in peripheral blood to predict outcome in patients with unsatisfactory recovery |
| Yılmaz et al. | Prospective | 23 patients, | 40.2 ± 15.7, | Immunologic parameters (IL-1β, IL-2r, IL-6, IL-8, and TNF-α) | The cytokine levels of did not correlate with the degree of recovery |
Summary of prognostic biomarkers for acute peripheral facial palsy (Oxidative parameter).
| Author (Year) | Study Design | Sample Size | Age (years) | Biomarkers | Results/Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Çalcı et al. (2018) [ | Prospective | 30 patients, | 33.6 ± 8.3, | PON, ARE, IMA, albumin-adjusted IMA | PON and ARE levels of the patient group were significantly lower than controls and IMA, albumin-adjusted IMA levels were significantly higher than controls |
| Babademez et al. (2016) [ | Prospective | 77 patients, 38 controls | 38.48 ± 10.31, 37.37 ± 10.75 (Mean) | Native thiol (-SH) and total thiol (-SH+-S-S-) | The mean native thiol and total thiol were significantly lower and disulfide levels were higher in BP than controls. However, there was no correlation between the HBS and thiol profiles |