The proteome pattern cGvHD_MS14 allows early and accurate prediction of chronic GvHD after allogeneic stem cell transplantation.
Weissinger. E M EM; Human. C C; Metzger. J J; Hambach. L L; Wolf. D D; Greinix. H T HT; Dickinson. A M AM; Mullen. W W; Jonigk. D D; Kuzmina. Z Z; Kreipe. H H; Schweier. P P; Böhm. O O; Türüchanow. I I; Ihlenburg-Schwarz. D D; Raad. J J; Durban. A A; Schiemann. M M; Könecke. C C; Diedrich. H H; Holler. E E; Beutel. G G; Krauter. J J; Ganser. A A; Stadler. M M
Key Findings
- A urinary protein pattern (cGvHD_MS14) predicts chronic graft‑versus‑host disease with 84% sensitivity and 76% specificity.
- Prediction works up to 55 days before clinical diagnosis and improves to 93% sensitivity when combined with clinical data.
- The pattern includes fragments of thymosin‑beta‑4, among other proteins, but does not detect acute graft‑versus‑host disease.
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers this research isn’t directly useful, as it’s a diagnostic tool for a specific transplant complication, not a therapy or supplement. It doesn’t provide actionable advice for longevity, metabolism, or performance, and thymosin‑beta‑4 fragments are only biomarkers here, not a treatment strategy.
Summary
Scientists found a set of 14 tiny protein pieces in urine that can predict a serious complication called chronic graft-versus-host disease after a stem‑cell transplant, and six of those pieces come from a protein called thymosin‑beta‑4. This test can spot the disease weeks before symptoms appear, but it’s only useful for patients who have had a transplant, not for general health or performance goals.
Abstract
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT) may be curative, but is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGvHD), characterized by inflammation and fibrosis of multiple target organs, considerably contributes to the morbidity and mortality even years after allo-HSCT. Diagnosis of cGvHD is based on clinical features and histology of biopsies. Here, we report the generation of a urinary cGvHD-specific proteome-pattern (cGvHD_MS14) established by capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry to predict onset and severity of cGvHD as an unbiased laboratory test. cGvHD_MS14 was evaluated on samples from 412 patients collected prospectively in four transplant centers. Sensitivity and specificity was 84 and 76% by cGvHD_MS14 classification. Sensitivity further increased to 93% by combination of cGvHD_MS14 with relevant clinical variables to a logistic regression model. cGvHD was predicted up to 55 days prior to clinical diagnosis. Acute GvHD is not recognized by cGvHD_MS14. cGvHD_MS14 consists of 14 differentially excreted peptides, six of those have been sequenced to date and are fragments from thymosin β-4, eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4γ2, fibrinogen β-chain or collagens. In conclusion, the cGvHD_MS14-pattern allows early, highly sensitive and specific prediction of cGvHD as an independent diagnostic criterion of clinical diagnosis potentially allowing early therapeutic intervention.
Study Information
pubmed
2016
2016-09-28T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/leu.2016.259
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