First qualification study of serum biomarkers as indicators of total body burden of osteoarthritis.

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a debilitating chronic multijoint disease of global proportions. OA presence and severity is usually documented by x-ray imaging but whole body imaging is impractical due to radiation exposure, time and cost. Systemic (serum or urine) biomarkers offer a potential alternative m...

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Main Authors: Virginia B Kraus, Thomas B Kepler, Thomas Stabler, Jordan Renner, Joanne Jordan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2010-03-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2840035?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-d7f2b114d10349849837eecd5adf05002020-11-25T02:13:55ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032010-03-0153e973910.1371/journal.pone.0009739First qualification study of serum biomarkers as indicators of total body burden of osteoarthritis.Virginia B KrausThomas B KeplerThomas StablerJordan RennerJoanne JordanOsteoarthritis (OA) is a debilitating chronic multijoint disease of global proportions. OA presence and severity is usually documented by x-ray imaging but whole body imaging is impractical due to radiation exposure, time and cost. Systemic (serum or urine) biomarkers offer a potential alternative method of quantifying total body burden of disease but no OA-related biomarker has ever been stringently qualified to determine the feasibility of this approach. The goal of this study was to evaluate the ability of three OA-related biomarkers to predict various forms or subspecies of OA and total body burden of disease.Female participants (461) with clinical hand OA underwent radiography of hands, hips, knees and lumbar spine; x-rays were comprehensively scored for OA features of osteophyte and joint space narrowing. Three OA-related biomarkers, serum hyaluronan (sHA), cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (sCOMP), and urinary C-telopeptide of type II collagen (uCTX2), were measured by ELISA. sHA, sCOMP and uCTX2 correlated positively with total osteophyte burden in models accounting for demographics (age, weight, height): R(2) = 0.60, R(2) = 0.47, R(2) = 0.51 (all p<10(-6)); sCOMP correlated negatively with total joint space narrowing burden: R(2) = 0.69 (p<10(-6)). Biomarkers and demographics predicted 35-38% of variance in total burden of OA (total joint space narrowing or osteophyte). Joint size did not determine the contribution to the systemic biomarker concentration. Biomarker correlation with disease in the lumbar spine resembled that in the rest of the skeleton.We have suspected that the correlation of systemic biomarkers with disease has been hampered by the inability to fully phenotype the burden of OA in a patient. These results confirm the hypothesis, revealed upon adequate patient phenotyping, that systemic joint tissue concentrations of several biomarkers can be quantitative indicators of specific subspecies of OA and of total body burden of disease.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2840035?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Virginia B Kraus
Thomas B Kepler
Thomas Stabler
Jordan Renner
Joanne Jordan
spellingShingle Virginia B Kraus
Thomas B Kepler
Thomas Stabler
Jordan Renner
Joanne Jordan
First qualification study of serum biomarkers as indicators of total body burden of osteoarthritis.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Virginia B Kraus
Thomas B Kepler
Thomas Stabler
Jordan Renner
Joanne Jordan
author_sort Virginia B Kraus
title First qualification study of serum biomarkers as indicators of total body burden of osteoarthritis.
title_short First qualification study of serum biomarkers as indicators of total body burden of osteoarthritis.
title_full First qualification study of serum biomarkers as indicators of total body burden of osteoarthritis.
title_fullStr First qualification study of serum biomarkers as indicators of total body burden of osteoarthritis.
title_full_unstemmed First qualification study of serum biomarkers as indicators of total body burden of osteoarthritis.
title_sort first qualification study of serum biomarkers as indicators of total body burden of osteoarthritis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2010-03-01
description Osteoarthritis (OA) is a debilitating chronic multijoint disease of global proportions. OA presence and severity is usually documented by x-ray imaging but whole body imaging is impractical due to radiation exposure, time and cost. Systemic (serum or urine) biomarkers offer a potential alternative method of quantifying total body burden of disease but no OA-related biomarker has ever been stringently qualified to determine the feasibility of this approach. The goal of this study was to evaluate the ability of three OA-related biomarkers to predict various forms or subspecies of OA and total body burden of disease.Female participants (461) with clinical hand OA underwent radiography of hands, hips, knees and lumbar spine; x-rays were comprehensively scored for OA features of osteophyte and joint space narrowing. Three OA-related biomarkers, serum hyaluronan (sHA), cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (sCOMP), and urinary C-telopeptide of type II collagen (uCTX2), were measured by ELISA. sHA, sCOMP and uCTX2 correlated positively with total osteophyte burden in models accounting for demographics (age, weight, height): R(2) = 0.60, R(2) = 0.47, R(2) = 0.51 (all p<10(-6)); sCOMP correlated negatively with total joint space narrowing burden: R(2) = 0.69 (p<10(-6)). Biomarkers and demographics predicted 35-38% of variance in total burden of OA (total joint space narrowing or osteophyte). Joint size did not determine the contribution to the systemic biomarker concentration. Biomarker correlation with disease in the lumbar spine resembled that in the rest of the skeleton.We have suspected that the correlation of systemic biomarkers with disease has been hampered by the inability to fully phenotype the burden of OA in a patient. These results confirm the hypothesis, revealed upon adequate patient phenotyping, that systemic joint tissue concentrations of several biomarkers can be quantitative indicators of specific subspecies of OA and of total body burden of disease.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2840035?pdf=render
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