4.6 Article

Serum Phosphorus, Serum Bicarbonate, and Renal Function in Relation to Liver CYP1A2 Activity

Journal

DIAGNOSTICS
Volume 13, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics13182996

Keywords

CYP1A2; caffeine metabolism; renal function; serum phosphorus; serum bicarbonate

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The liver plays a crucial role in maintaining acid-base balance, but limited epidemiological studies have investigated how it contributes to this balance using non-invasive biomarkers. This study examined the associations between serum biomarkers related to acid-base balance and renal function with liver CYP1A2 activity. The findings suggest that serum bicarbonate, serum phosphorus, and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) have dynamic associations with CYP1A2 activity, which depend on the extent of liver damage and the specific caffeine metabolite used to assess CYP1A2 activity.
The liver plays an important role in normal metabolism and physiological functions such as acid-base balance; however, limited epidemiologic studies have investigated how the liver contributes toward acid-base balance using non-invasive biomarkers. We determined associations between serum biomarkers related to acid-base balance and renal function with liver CYP1A2 activity. We used data from 1381 participants of the 2009-2010 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) with measurements of serum phosphorus, serum bicarbonate, caffeine intake, caffeine metabolites, and estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR). Liver CYP1A2 activity was estimated using urine caffeine metabolite indices, which were calculated as the ratio of one of the urine caffeine metabolites (i.e., paraxanthine and 1-methyluric acid) to caffeine intake. We analyzed associations in the whole data set and in different strata of hepatic steatosis index (HSI) based on different cut-points. We found that serum bicarbonate was positively associated with CYP1A2 activity in the whole data set when comparing persons with bicarbonate at Q4 to Q1 (beta = 0.18, p = 0.10 for paraxanthine; beta = 0.20, p = 0.02 for 1-methyluric acid). Furthermore, serum phosphorus was positively associated with CYP1A2 activity only in the stratum of 30 <= HSI < 36. Lastly, low eGFR was significantly associated with lower CYP1A2 activity measured with paraxanthine in the whole dataset and in all the strata with HSI < 42; when comparing eGFR < 60 to eGFR > 90, beta estimates ranged from -0.41 to -1.38, p-values ranged from 0.0018 to 0.004. We observed an opposite trend in the highest stratum (HSI >= 42). Non-invasive measurements of serum bicarbonate, serum phosphorus, and eGFR have dynamic associations with CYP1A2 activity. These associations depend on the extent of liver damage and the caffeine metabolite used to assess CYP1A2 activity.

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