4.5 Article

Metabolomic profiling of active and inactive liver cystic echinococcosis

Journal

ACTA TROPICA
Volume 221, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.actatropica.2021.105985

Keywords

cystic echinococcosis; liver; GC-MS; LC-qTOF-MS; diagnostic reference

Funding

  1. Hacettepe University Scientific Research Projects Coordination Unit [TSA-2019-17873]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Cystic Echinococcosis is a life-threatening parasitic zoonosis with varying treatment options depending on the nature of the cyst. Metabolite concentrations play a crucial role in discriminating between active and inactive cysts.
Cystic Echinococcosis (CE) is one of the life-threatening diseases worldwide. It is a parasitic zoonosis caused by tapeworms of the species Echinococcus granulosus sensu lato (s.l). The treatment options of CE vary from simple watch and wait approach to invasive treatment, based on the type and especially the nature of the cyst (active/ inactive). Serological tests are inadequate to distinguish between active and inactive CE. A diagnostic reference that can determine whether the cyst is active or inactive can easily guide the treatment strategy. We aimed to test whether gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and liquid chromatographyquadropole time of flight mass spectrometry (LC-qTOF-MS) based metabolomics can establish a plasma metabolic fingerprint of CE patients and identify a diagnostic reference to discriminate active and inactive CE cysts. Metabolite concentrations were measured in plasma samples of 36 active CE patients, 17 inactive CE patients and 31 healthy controls. Multivariate statistical analysis on 232 identified metabolites obtained from two analytical platforms was performed by using principle component analysis (PCA) and partial least squarediscriminant analysis (PLS-DA) methods. The PLS-DA scores plot of the combined data set demonstrated a good separation between the groups. Compared to the healthy control group, decreased levels of squalene and increased levels of glyceric acid, 3-phosphoglycerate, glutamic acid, palmitoleic acid and oleic acid were determined in the CE patients. However, decreased levels of 3-phosphoglycerate and increased levels of 4hydroxyphenylacetylglutamine, docosahexanoic acid were determined in active CE patients compared to the inactive CE patients. Determination of differences in metabolites may provide detailed understandings of potential metabolic process associated with active and inactive CE patients, and altered specific metabolic changes may provide some clues to obtain diagnostic reference for CE. This study has certain limitations: a. various factors affecting results of metabolomic studies such as lifestyle and dietary habits of the patients could not be fully controlled b. other infectious or malignant diseases of the liver should also be included as a positive control to evaluate the specificity of the diagnostic references.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available