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Soluble Receptor for Advanced Glycation End Products (sRAGE) as a Biomarker of COPD 

Authors :
Katherine A. Pratte
Jeffery L. Curtis
Katerina Kechris
David Couper
Michael H. Cho
Edwin K. Silverman
Dawn L. DeMeo
Frank C. Sciurba
Yingze Zhang
Victor E. Ortega
Wanda O'Neal
Lucas A. Gillenwater
David A. Lynch
Eric Hoffman
John D. Newell
Alejandro P. Comellas
Peter J. Castaldi
Bruce Miller
Simon D. Pouwels
Nick H.T. ten Hacken
Rainer Bischoff
Frank Klont
Prescott Woodruff
Robert Paine
R. Graham Barr
John Hoidal
Claire M. Doerschuk
Jean-Paul Charbonnier
Ruby Sung
Nick Locantore
John Yonchuk
Ruth Tal-Singer
Sean Jacobson
Debbie Merrill
Russell P. Bowler
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Background:Soluble receptor for advanced glycation end products (sRAGE) is a proposed emphysema and airflow obstruction biomarker; however, previous publication have shown inconsistent associations and only one study has investigate the association between sRAGE and emphysema. No cohorts have examined the association between sRAGE and progressive decline of lung function. There have also been no evaluation of assay compatibility, receiver operating characteristics, and little examination of the effect of genetic variability in non-white population. This manuscript addresses these deficiencies and introduces novel data from Pittsburgh COPD SCCOR and as well as novel work on airflow obstruction. A meta-analysis is used to quantify sRAGE associations with clinical phenotypes.Methods: sRAGE was measured in four independent longitudinal cohorts on different analytic assays: COPDGene (n=1,443), SPIROMICS (n=1,623); ECLIPSE (n=2,349); Pittsburgh COPD SCCOR (n=399). We constructed adjusted linear mixed models to determine associations of sRAGE with baseline and follow up forced expiratory volume at one second (FEV1) and emphysema by quantitative high-resolution CT lung density at the 15th percentile (adjusted for total lung capacity).Results: Lower plasma or serum sRAGE values were associated with a COPD diagnosis (P1 (P < 0.001), and emphysema severity (P10-transformed sRAGE was associated with 105 ± 22 mL lower FEV1 and 4.14 ± 0.55 g/L lower adjusted lung density. After adjusting for covariates, lower sRAGE at baseline was associated with greater FEV1 decline and emphysema progression only in the ECLIPSE cohort. Non-Hispanic white subjects carrying the rs2070600 minor allele (A) and non-Hispanic African Americans carrying the rs2071288 minor allele (A) had lower sRAGE measurements compare to those with the major allele, but their emphysema-sRAGE regression slopes were similar. Conclusions: Lower blood sRAGE is associated with more severe airflow obstruction and emphysema, but associations with progression are inconsistent in the cohorts analyzed. In these cohorts, genotype influenced sRAGE measurements and strengthened variance modelling. Thus, genotype should be included in sRAGE evaluations.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........da291315733bff3bac712ffa51327c7a