Objectives: To assess the diagnostic value of serum KLK6 and KLK10 in patients with ovarian tumor in comparison to serum CA125.
Methods: Based on clinical and sonographic findings, 90 patients were consecutively recruited at the Gynecological Oncology Unit, Ain Shams University Maternity Hospital. Preoperative serum KLK6 and/or KLK10 were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay technique. The patients' final diagnoses were those of the histopathological reports.
Results: There were 27 malignant versus 63 benign cases. Serum markers' diagnostic specificity and sensitivity were 80.3/72.7, 56.8/64.0, and 39.53/58.3 for CA125, KLK6, and KLK10, respectively. Combination of CA125 with either of the other 2 markers revealed diagnostic enhancement with KLK10 (85.37/73.00) but not with KLK6 (42.86/86.36).
Conclusions: In ovarian cancer, serum KLK6 and KLK10 may have much lower overall sensitivities than serum CA125. However, whereas serum KLK6 may improve the sensitivity of CA125, serum KLK10 may have the highest specificity among the 3 markers.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/IGC.0b013e31821283c3 | DOI Listing |
Biomedicines
September 2022
Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
We hypothesized that the persistent depletion of neuroprotective markers accompanies neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration in patients after cardiac surgery. A total of 158 patients underwent elective heart surgery with their blood collected before surgery (t) and 24 h (t), seven days (t), and three months (t) post-surgery. The patients' serum was measured for markers of neurodegeneration (τau, τaup181-183, amyloid β1-40/β2-42, and S100), atypical neurodegeneration (KLK6 and NRGN), neuro-injury (neurofilament light/heavy, UC-HL, and GFAP), neuroinflammation (YKL-40 and TDP-43), peripheral nerve damage (NCAM-1), neuroprotection (apoE4, BDNF, fetuin, and clusterin), and vascular smoldering inflammation (C-reactive protein, CCL-28 IL-6, and IL-8).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeerJ
January 2023
Department of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, Medical University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland.
Background: The study was designed to evaluate the potential validity and utility of selected molecular markers in serum samples from patients with specific stages of laryngeal intraepithelial lesions that could serve as diagnostic tools in differentiation of benign and dysplastic lesions from invasive pathologies.
Methods: Prospective study included 80 consecutive patients with vocal fold lesions treated at the single otorhinolaryngology centre. All participants had surgical resection of the lesion.
Biomedicines
November 2021
Department of Genetics, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
The balance between neurodegeneration, neuroinflammation, neuroprotection, and COVID-19-directed therapy may underly the heterogeneity of SARS-CoV-2's neurological outcomes. A total of 105 patients hospitalized with a diagnosis of COVID-19 had serum collected over a 6 month period to assess neuroinflammatory (MIF, CCL23, MCP-1), neuro-injury (NFL, NCAM-1), neurodegenerative (KLK6, τ, phospho τ, amyloids, TDP43, YKL40), and neuroprotective (clusterin, fetuin, TREM-2) proteins. These were compared to markers of nonspecific inflammatory responses (IL-6, D-dimer, CRP) and of the overall viral burden (spike protein).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Genet
November 2021
The First Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang Chinese Medical University, Hangzhou, China.
To investigate the correlation between gene mutation and knee osteoarthritis (KOA), a whole-exome sequencing (WES) was applied to analyze blood samples of four KOA patients and two normal subjects in a family. Gene mutations were identified by gene-trapping and high-throughput sequencing analysis across the differences between the patients and normal subjects. The interactive gene network analysis on the retrieval of interacting genes (STRING) database and the KOA-related genes expression data sets was performed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Cell Neurosci
June 2020
Laboratory of Cellular Pathology, Institute of Anatomy, Histology, and Pathology, Universidad Austral de Chile, Valdivia, Chile.
Kallikrein-related peptidases (KLKs) are a family of serine proteases that when dysregulated may contribute to neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration. In the present review article, we describe what is known about their physiological and pathological roles with an emphasis on KLK6 and KLK8, two KLKs that are highly expressed in the adult central nervous system (CNS). Altered expression and activity of KLK6 have been linked to brain physiology and the development of multiple sclerosis.
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