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1.
JHEP Rep ; 6(8): 101115, 2024 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39139457

RESUMEN

Background & Aims: Wilson disease (WD) is caused by accumulation of copper primarily in the liver and brain. During maintenance therapy of WD with D-penicillamine, current guidelines recommend on-treatment ranges of urinary copper excretion (UCE) of 200-500 µg/24 h and serum non-ceruloplasmin-bound copper (NCC) of 50-150 µg/L. We compared NCC (measured by two novel assays) and UCE from patients with clinically stable WD on D-penicillamine therapy with these recommendations. Methods: This is a secondary analysis of data from the Chelate trial (NCT03539952) that enrolled physician-selected patients with clinically stable WD on D-penicillamine maintenance therapy (at an unaltered dose for at least 4 months). We analyzed laboratory samples from the first screening visit, prior to interventions. NCC was measured by either protein speciation (NCC-Sp) using anion exchange high-performance liquid chromatography protein speciation followed by copper determination with inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy or as exchangeable copper (NCC-Ex). NCC-Sp was also analyzed in healthy controls (n = 75). Results: In 76 patients with WD with 21.3±14.3 average treatment-years, NCC-Sp (mean±SD: 56.6±26.2 µg/L) and NCC-Ex (mean±SD: 57.9±24.7 µg/L) were within the 50-150 µg/L target in 61% and 54% of patients, respectively. In addition, 36% and 31%, respectively, were even below the normal ranges (NCC-Sp: 46-213 µg/L, NCC-Ex: 41-71 µg/L). NCC-Ex positively correlated with NCC-Sp (r2 = 0.66, p <0.001) but with systematic deviation. UCE was outside the 200-500 µg/24 h target range in 58%. Only 14/69 (20%) fulfilled both the NCC-Sp and UCE targets. Clinical or biochemical signs of copper deficiency were not detected. Conclusion: Clinically stable patients with WD on maintenance D-penicillamine therapy frequently have lower NCC-Sp or higher UCE than current recommendations without signs of overtreatment. Further studies are warranted to identify appropriate target ranges of NCC-Sp, NCC-Ex and UCE in treated WD. Impact and implications: Chelator treatment of patients with Wilson disease (WD) is currently guided by measurements of non-ceruloplasmin-bound copper (NCC) and 24 h urinary copper excretion (UCE) but validation is limited. In 76 adults with ≈21 years history of treated WD and clinically stable disease on D-penicillamine therapy, NCC was commonly found to be below normal values and recommended target ranges whether measured by protein speciation (NCC-Sp) or as exchangeable copper (NCC-Ex), while UCE values were above the recommended target range in 49%. Common wisdom would suggest overtreatment in these cases, but no clinical or biochemical signs of copper deficiency were observed. Exploratory analysis of liver enzymes suggested that NCC below levels seen in controls may be beneficial, while the relation to UCE was less clear. The data calls for critical re-evaluation of target ranges for treatment of WD, specific for drug and laboratory methodology. Clinical trial number: (NCT03539952).

2.
Proteome Sci ; 22(1): 3, 2024 Jan 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38279183

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The role of platelets in disease progression as well as the function of platelets as part of the haemostatic and immunological system in patients with liver cirrhosis is only incompletely understood. This is partly due to difficulties in assessing platelet function. Proteome analyses of platelets have been used to further investigate the role of platelets in other diseases. AIM: To assess possible changes in the platelet proteome during different stages of alcohol induced liver cirrhosis compared to healthy donors. PATIENTS AND METHODS: A 45 ml blood sample was drawn from 18 participants aged 18-80 years evenly divided into three groups of healthy donors, patients with less advanced alcohol induced liver cirrhosis (Child-Pugh < 7) and patients with advanced liver cirrhosis (Child-Pugh > 10). The blood was processed to isolate platelets and perform subsequent two-dimensional gel-electrophoresis using a SYPRO™ Ruby dye. After computational analysation significantly in- or decreased protein spots (defined as a two-fold abundance change between different study cohorts and ANOVA < 0.05) were identified via liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LCMS) and searching against human protein databases. RESULTS: The comparative analysis identified four platelet proteins with progressively decreased protein expression in patients with liver cirrhosis. More specifically Ras-related protein Rab-7a (Rab-7a), Ran-specific binding protein 1 (RANBP1), Rho GDP-dissociation inhibitor 1 (RhoGDI1), and 14-3-3 gamma. CONCLUSION: There is significant change in protein expression in the platelet proteome throughout the disease progression of alcohol induced liver cirrhosis. The identified proteins are possibly involved in haemostatic and immunoregulatory function of platelets.

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