Profiles of serum cytokines in acute drug-induced liver injury and their prognostic significance.

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Steuerwald, Nury M

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Foureau, David M

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Norton, H James

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Zhou, Jie

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Parsons, Judith C

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Chalasani, Naga

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Fontana, Robert J

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Watkins, Paul B

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Lee, William M

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Reddy, K Rajender

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Stolz, Andrew

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Talwalkar, Jayant

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Davern, Timothy

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Saha, Dhanonjoy

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Bell, Lauren N

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Barnhart, Huiman

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Gu, Jiezhun

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Serrano, Jose

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Bonkovsky, Herbert L

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Shoukry, Naglaa H

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2020-07-01T15:37:41Z

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2020-07-01T15:37:41Z

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2013-01

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2020-07-01T15:37:39Z

dc.description.abstract

Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is the most common cause of acute liver failure in the United-States. The aim of the study was to describe serum immune profiles associated with acute DILI, to investigate whether there are profiles associated with clinical features or types of DILI and/or with prognosis, and to assess temporal changes in levels. Twenty-seven immune analytes were measured in the sera of 78 DILI subjects in the Drug-Induced Liver Injury Network (DILIN) and compared with 40 healthy controls. Immune analytes (14 cytokines, 7 chemokines and 6 growth factors) were measured by BioPlex multiplex ELISA at DILI onset and after 6 months. A modeling process utilizing immune principles was used to select a final set of variables among 27 immune analytes and several additional clinical lab values for prediction of early death (within 6 months of DILI onset). Nineteen of the 27 immune analytes were differentially expressed among healthy control, DILI onset and 6-month cohorts. Disparate patterns of immune responses, especially innate and adaptive cellular (mostly TH17) immunity were evident. Low values of four immune analytes (IL-9, IL-17, PDGF-bb and RANTES) and serum albumin are predictive of early death [PPV = 88% (95% CI, 65%-100%), NPV = 97% (95% CI, 93%-100%), accuracy = 96% (95% CI, 92%-100%)].Acute DILI is associated with robust and varying immune responses. High levels of expression of cytokines associated with innate immunity are associated with a poor prognosis, whereas high levels of expression of adaptive cytokines are associated with good long-term prognosis and eventual recovery. Serum immune analyte profiles at DILI onset appear to be of prognostic, and perhaps, diagnostic significance.

dc.identifier

PONE-D-13-28852

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1932-6203

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1932-6203

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21125

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eng

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Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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PloS one

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10.1371/journal.pone.0081974

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Humans

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Acute Disease

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Cytokines

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Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay

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Prognosis

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Cohort Studies

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Models, Immunological

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Immunity, Innate

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Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury

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Profiles of serum cytokines in acute drug-induced liver injury and their prognostic significance.

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Barnhart, Huiman|0000-0003-0988-3439

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e81974

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12

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School of Medicine

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Duke Clinical Research Institute

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Biostatistics & Bioinformatics

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Duke

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Institutes and Centers

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Basic Science Departments

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Published

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8

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