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Serum brain injury biomarkers are gestationally and post-natally regulated in non-brain injured neonates

Authors :
Sandra Brooks
Barbara D. Friedes
Frances Northington
Ernest Graham
Aylin Tekes
Vera J. Burton
Gwendolyn Gerner
Jie Zhu
Raul Chavez-Valdez
Dhananjay Vaidya
Allen D. Everett
Source :
Pediatric Research.
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

To determine the association of gestational age (GA) and day of life (DOL) with the circulating serum concentration of six brain injury-associated biomarkers in non-brain injured neonates born between 23 and 41 weeks' GA.In a multicenter prospective observational cohort study, serum CNS-insult, inflammatory and trophic proteins concentrations were measured daily in the first 7 DOL.Overall, 3232 serum samples were analyzed from 745 enrollees, median GA 32.3 weeks. BDNF increased 3.7% and IL-8 increased 8.9% each week of gestation. VEGF, IL-6, and IL-10 showed no relationship with GA. VEGF increased 10.8% and IL-8 18.9%, each DOL. IL-6 decreased by 15.8% each DOL. IL-10 decreased by 81.4% each DOL for DOL 0-3. BDNF did not change with DOL. Only 49.67% of samples had detectable GFAP and 33.15% had detectable NRGN. The odds of having detectable GFAP and NRGN increased by 53% and 11%, respectively, each week after 36 weeks' GA. The odds of having detectable GFAP and NRGN decreased by 15% and 8%, respectively, each DOL.BDNF and IL-8 serum concentrations vary with GA. VEGF and interleukin concentrations are dynamic in the first week of life, suggesting circulating levels should be adjusted for GA and DOL for clinically relevant assessment of brain injury.Normative data of six brain injury-related biomarkers is being proposed. When interpreting serum concentrations of brain injury biomarkers, it is key to adjust for gestational age at birth and day of life during the first week to correctly assess for clinical brain injury in neonates. Variation in levels of some biomarkers may be related to gestational and postnatal age and not necessarily pathology.

Details

ISSN :
15300447 and 00313998
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....517efeb83cdb25ce4ec2c6c466c1717e