4.6 Article

LC-MS/MS analysis of plasma glucosylsphingosine as a biomarker for diagnosis and follow-up monitoring in Gaucher disease in the Spanish population

Journal

CLINICAL CHEMISTRY AND LABORATORY MEDICINE
Volume 58, Issue 5, Pages 798-809

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/cclm-2019-0949

Keywords

CCL18/PARC; CHIT1; chitotriosidase; enzyme replacement therapy; Gaucher disease; glucosylsphingosine; substrate reduction therapy

Funding

  1. FEETEG

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Background: Gaucher disease (GD), caused by a deficiency in acid beta-glucosidase, leads to the accumulation of glucosylsphingosine (GluSph), which has been used as a powerful biomarker for the diagnosis and follow-up of GD. Our aim was to perform the first retrospective study of GluSph in Spanish patients, analyzing its relationship with classical biomarkers and other parameters of disease and its utility regarding treatment monitoring. Methods: Classical biomarkers were evaluated retrospectively by standard methods in a total of 145 subjects, including 47 GD patients, carriers, healthy controls and patients suffering from other lysosomal lipidoses. GluSph was also measured using a liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method developed as part of the present study. Results: The optimized method presented intra- and inter-assay variations of 3.1 and 11.5%, respectively, overall recovery higher than 96% and linearity up to plasma concentrations of 1000 ng/mL with 100% specificity and sensitivity. Only GD patients displayed GluSph levels above 5.4 ng/mL at diagnosis and this was significantly correlated with the classical biomarkers chitotriosidase (r = 0.560) and the chemokine CCL18/PARC (CCL18/PARC) (rho = 0.515), as well as with the Spanish magnetic resonance imaging index (S-MRI, r = 0.364), whereas chitotriosidase correlated with liver volume (r = 0.372) and CCL18/PARC increased in patients with bone manifestations (p = 0.005). GluSph levels decreased with treatment in naive patients. Conclusions: Plasma GluSph is the most disease-specific biomarker for GD with demonstrated diagnostic value and responsiveness to therapy. GluSph in the present series of patients failed to demonstrate better correlations with clinical characteristics at onset than classical biomarkers.

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