已发表论文

血清生物标志物 LBP 在脊柱结核诊断中的价值分析

 

Authors Lou C, Liu J, Ren Z, Ji J, Ma H, Dong H, Wang L, Zhang X, Niu N

Received 14 June 2022

Accepted for publication 15 August 2022

Published 29 August 2022 Volume 2022:15 Pages 4915—4926

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/IDR.S377182

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 3

Editor who approved publication: Professor Suresh Antony

Objective: To investigate the correlation between the expression of lipopolysaccharide-binding protein (LBP) in peripheral blood of spinal tuberculosis and clinical diagnosis and to evaluate its value as a diagnostic marker of spinal tuberculosis.
Methods: In the experimental group, clinical history data and peripheral blood were collected from 100 patients with spinal tuberculosis who were admitted to the Department of Spine Surgery, General Hospital of Ningxia Medical University from May 2017 to May 2020, and peripheral blood was collected from 30 healthy volunteers in the control group. Screening of differential LBP expression by proteomics and ELISA to verify its expression in peripheral blood of spinal tuberculosis patients. t-test, Spearman analysis, linear regression and ROC curve were used to evaluate the diagnostic value of LBP in peripheral blood for spinal tuberculosis.
Results: The expression of LBP protein in peripheral blood is significantly higher in patients with spinal tuberculosis than in the normal population; LBP assay values were significantly and positively correlated with CRP and ESR values (< 0.01); the AUC of LBP in the diagnosis of spinal tuberculosis for pathological examination, bacteriological culture, T-cell spot test for tuberculosis infection (T-SPOT), imaging diagnosis, and acid fast bacillus were, respectively, 0.677 (< 0.01), 0.707 (< 0.01), 0.751 (< 0.01), 0.714 (< 0.01), and 0.656 (< 0.05), and there was a correlation between LBP and the diagnostic evaluation of spinal tuberculosis.
Conclusion: LBP could be a new candidate biomarker for the diagnosis of spinal tuberculosis.
Keywords: spinal tuberculosis, proteomics, LBP, biomarker