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Enhanced Liver Fibrosis Score as a Biomarker for Vascular Damage Assessment in Patients with Takayasu Arteritis—A Pilot Study

Maja Stojanović, Sanvila Rašković, Vladimir Milivojević, Rada Mišković, Ivan Soldatović, Sanja Stanković, Ivan Ranković, Marija Stanković, Sanja Dragašević, Miodrag Krstić, Andreas P. Diamantopoulos

2021Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Takayasu Arteritis (TA) is characterized by granulomatous panarteritis, vessel wall fibrosis, and irreversible vascular impairment. The aim of this study is to explore the usefulness of the Enhanced Liver Fibrosis score (ELF), procollagen-III aminoterminal propeptide (PIIINP), tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP-1), and hyaluronic acid (HA) in assessing vascular damage in TA patients. ELF, PIIINP, TIMP-1, and HA were measured in 24 TA patients, and the results were correlated with the clinical damage indexes (VDI and TADS), an imaging damage score (CARDS), and disease activity scores (NIH and ITAS2010). A mean ELF score 8.42 (±1.12) and values higher than 7.7 (cut-off for liver fibrosis) in 21/24 (87.5%) of patients were detected. The VDI and TADS correlated significantly to ELF (p < 0.01). Additionally, a strong association across ELF and CARDS (p < 0.0001), PIIINP and CARDS (p < 0.001), and HA and CARDS (p < 0.001) was observed. No correlations of the tested biomarkers with inflammatory parameters, NIH, and ITAS2010 scores were found. To our knowledge, this is the first study that suggests the association of the serum biomarkers PIIINP, HA, and ELF score with damage but not with disease activity in TA patients. The ELF score and PIIINP may be useful biomarkers reflecting an ongoing fibrotic process and quantifying vascular damage.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineFibrosisBiomarkerInternal medicineGastroenterologyPathologyProcollagen peptidaseConnective tissue diseaseDiseaseAutoimmune diseaseBiologyBiochemistryVasculitis and related conditionsRenal Diseases and GlomerulopathiesSystemic Sclerosis and Related Diseases