Department of Neuroscience, Central Clinical School, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Microbiology, School of Life Sciences, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia.
J Neurotrauma. 2021 Oct 1;38(19):2652-2666. doi: 10.1089/neu.2021.0011.
Blood-based protein biomarkers have revolutionized several fields of medicine by enabling molecular level diagnosis, as well as monitoring disease progression and treatment efficacy. Traumatic brain injury (TBI) so far has benefitted only moderately from using protein biomarkers to improve injury outcome. Because of its complexity and dynamic nature, TBI, especially its most prevalent mild form (mild TBI; mTBI), presents unique challenges toward protein biomarker discovery and validation given that blood is frequently obtained and processed outside of the clinical laboratory (e.g., athletic fields, battlefield) under variable conditions. As it stands, the field of mTBI blood biomarkers faces a number of outstanding questions. Do elevated blood levels of currently used biomarkers-ubiquitin carboxy-terminal hydrolase L1, glial fibrillary acidic protein, neurofilament light chain, and tau/p-tau-truly mirror the extent of parenchymal damage? Do these different proteins represent distinct injury mechanisms? Is the blood-brain barrier a "brick wall"? What is the relationship between intra- versus extracranial values? Does prolonged elevation of blood levels reflect release or extended protein half-lives? Does biological sex affect the pathobiological responses after mTBI and thus blood levels of protein biomarkers? At the practical level, it is unknown how pre-analytical variables-sample collection, preparation, handling, and stability-affect the quality and reliability of biomarker data. The ever-increasing sensitivity of assay systems and lack of quality control of samples, combined with the almost complete reliance on antibody-based assay platforms, represent important unsolved issues given that false-negative results can lead to false clinical decision making and adverse outcomes. This article serves as a commentary on the state of mTBI biomarkers and the landscape of significant challenges. We highlight and discusses several biological and methodological "known unknowns" and close with some practical recommendations.
基于血液的蛋白质生物标志物通过实现分子水平的诊断,以及监测疾病进展和治疗效果,彻底改变了多个医学领域。创伤性脑损伤(TBI)迄今为止仅从中受益于使用蛋白质生物标志物来改善损伤结果。由于其复杂性和动态性质,TBI,尤其是最常见的轻度形式(轻度 TBI;mTBI),在蛋白质生物标志物的发现和验证方面提出了独特的挑战,因为血液经常在临床实验室之外(例如,运动场地,战场)在不同的条件下获得和处理。就目前而言,mTBI 血液生物标志物领域面临着许多悬而未决的问题。目前使用的生物标志物-泛素羧基末端水解酶 L1、神经胶质纤维酸性蛋白、神经丝轻链和 tau/p-tau 的血液水平升高是否真的反映了实质损伤的程度?这些不同的蛋白质是否代表不同的损伤机制?血脑屏障是“一堵墙”吗?颅内与颅外值之间的关系如何?血液水平升高的持续时间是否反映释放或延长了蛋白质半衰期?生物性别是否会影响 mTBI 后的病理生物学反应,从而影响蛋白质生物标志物的血液水平?在实践水平上,尚不清楚预分析变量-样本采集、准备、处理和稳定性-如何影响生物标志物数据的质量和可靠性。由于假阴性结果可能导致错误的临床决策和不良后果,因此检测系统的灵敏度不断提高,以及缺乏对样本的质量控制,再加上几乎完全依赖于抗体检测平台,这是一个重要的未解决问题。本文是对 mTBI 生物标志物的现状以及重大挑战的景观的评论。我们强调并讨论了几个生物学和方法学的“已知未知”,最后提出了一些实用的建议。