Publication: Soluble forms of extracellular cytokeratin 18 may differentiate simple steatosis from nonalcoholic steatohepatitis
Date
2007-02-14
Authors
Yılmaz, Yusuf
Ulukaya, Engin
GÜREL, SELİM
NAK, SELİM GİRAY
Akgöz, Semra
Keskin, Murat
Aker, Sibel
Authors
Yılmaz, Yusuf
Dolar, Enver
Ulukaya, Engin
Akgöz, Semra
Keskin, Murat
Kıyıcı, Murat
Aker, Sibel
Yılmaztepe, Arzu
Gürel, Selim
Gülten, Macit
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Baishideng Publishing Group Inc
Abstract
AIM: To investigate whether serum levels of two soluble forms of extracellular cytokeratin 18 (M30-antigen and M65-antigen) may differentiate nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) from simple steatosis in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD).METHODS: A total of 83 patients with suspected NAFLD and 49 healthy volunteers were investigated. Patients with suspected NAFLD were classified according to their liver histology into four groups: definitive NASH (n = 45), borderline NASH (n = 24), simple fatty liver (n = 9), and normal tissue (n = 5). Serum levels of caspase-3 generated cytokeratin-18 fragments (M30-antigen) and total cytokeratin-18 (M65-antigen) were determined by ELISA.RESULTS: Levels of M30-antigen and M65-antigen were significantly higher in patients with definitive NASH compared to the other groups. An abnormal value (> 121.60 IU/L) of M30-antigen yielded a 60.0% sensitivity and a 97.4% specificity for the diagnosis of NASH. Sensitivity and specificity of an abnormal M65-antigen level (> 243.82 IU/L) for the diagnosis of NASH were 68.9% and 81.6%, respectively. Among patients with NAFLD, M30-antigen and M65-antigen levels distinguished between advanced fibrosis and early-stage fibrosis with a sensitivity of 64.7% and 70.6%, and a specificity of 77.3% and 71.2%, respectively.CONCLUSION: Serum levels of M30-antigen and M65-antigen may be of clinical usefulness to identify patients with NASH. Further studies are mandatory to better assess the role of these apoptonecrotic biomarkers in NAFLD pathophysiology. (C) 2007 The WJG Press. All rights reserved.
Description
Keywords
Fatty liver-disease, Natural-history, Cell-death, Hepatocyte apoptosis, Variability, Features, Biopsy, Sera, Steatosis, Steatohepatitis, Cytokeratin 18, M30-antigen, M65-antigen, Gastroenterology & hepatology