Department of Pathophysiology and Joint Academic Rheumatology Program, School of Medicine, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 11526 Athens, Greece.
Department of Informatics, Ionian University, 49100 Kerkyra, Greece.
Cells. 2024 Nov 8;13(22):1851. doi: 10.3390/cells13221851.
Giant cell arteritis (GCA) is an autoimmune/autoinflammatory disease affecting large vessels in patients over 50 years old. The disease presents as an acute inflammatory response with two phenotypes, cranial GCA and large-vessel vasculitis (LV)-GCA, involving the thoracic aorta and its branches. 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (18F-FDG PET-CT) is among the imaging techniques contributing to diagnosing patients with systemic disease. However, its association with soluble inflammatory markers is still elusive. This proof-of-concept study aims to identify novel soluble serum biomarkers in PET/CT-positive patients with LV-GCA and associate them with active (0 months) and inactive disease (6 months following treatment), in sequential samples. The most-diseased-segment target-to-background ratio (TBR) was calculated for 13 LV-GCA patients, while 14 cranial GCA and 14 Polymyalgia Rheumatica patients with negative initial PET/CT scans served as disease controls. Serum macrophage-related cytokines were evaluated by cytometric bead array (CBA). Finally, previously published NMR/metabolomics data acquired from the same blood sampling were analyzed along with PET/CT findings. TBR was significantly increased in active versus inactive disease (3.32 vs. 2.65, = 0.006). The analysis identified nine serum metabolites as more sensitive to change from the active to inactive state. Among them, choline levels were exclusively altered in the LV-GCA group but not in the disease controls. Cytokine levels were not associated with PET/CT activity. Combining CRP, ESR, and TBR with choline levels, a composite index was generated to distinguish active and inactive LV-GCA (20.4 vs. 11.62, = 0.001). These preliminary results could pave the way for more extensive studies integrating serum metabolomic parameters with PET/CT imaging data to extract sensitive composite disease indexes useful for everyday clinical practice.
巨细胞动脉炎(GCA)是一种影响 50 岁以上患者大血管的自身免疫/炎症性疾病。该疾病表现为急性炎症反应,具有两种表型,颅 GCA 和大血管血管炎(LV-GCA),累及胸主动脉及其分支。18F-氟脱氧葡萄糖正电子发射断层扫描/计算机断层扫描(18F-FDG PET-CT)是有助于诊断全身性疾病患者的影像学技术之一。然而,其与可溶性炎症标志物的关联仍不清楚。这项概念验证研究旨在确定 PET/CT 阳性的 LV-GCA 患者中的新型可溶性血清生物标志物,并将其与活动(治疗后 6 个月)和不活动(治疗后 6 个月)疾病相关联。计算了 13 例 LV-GCA 患者的最患病节段靶标与背景比(TBR),而 14 例颅 GCA 和 14 例巨细胞动脉炎患者的初始 PET/CT 扫描均为阴性,作为疾病对照。通过流式细胞术珠阵列(CBA)评估血清巨噬细胞相关细胞因子。最后,还分析了与 PET/CT 结果一起从相同采血中获取的先前发表的 NMR/代谢组学数据。与疾病对照相比,活动期 TBR 明显高于静止期(3.32 比 2.65, = 0.006)。分析确定了 9 种血清代谢物,它们对从活动状态到静止状态的变化更敏感。其中,胆碱水平仅在 LV-GCA 组中发生改变,但在疾病对照组中没有改变。细胞因子水平与 PET/CT 活性无关。将 CRP、ESR 和 TBR 与胆碱水平相结合,生成一个综合指数来区分活动期和静止期 LV-GCA(20.4 比 11.62, = 0.001)。这些初步结果为将血清代谢组学参数与 PET/CT 成像数据相结合以提取敏感的综合疾病指数铺平了道路,这些指数可用于日常临床实践。