Altered plasma metabolite levels can be detected years before a glioma diagnosis
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31802Dato
2023-08-31Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Löding, Sebastian; Andersson, Ulrika; Kaaks, Rudolf; Schulze, Matthias B.; Pala, Valeria; Urbarova, Ilona Halva; Amiano, Pilar; Colorado-Yohar, Sandra M.; Guevara, Marcela; Heath, Alicia K.; Chatziioannou, Anastasia Chrysovalantou; Johansson, Mattias; Nyberg, Lars Erik; Antti, Henrik; Björkblom, Benny; Melin, BeatriceSammendrag
Genetic and metabolic changes in tissue and blood are reported to occur several years before
glioma diagnosis. Since gliomas are currently detected late, a liquid biopsy for early detection
could affect the quality of life and prognosis of patients. Here, we present a nested case-control
study of 550 prediagnostic glioma cases and 550 healthy controls from the Northern Sweden
Health and Disease study (NSHDS) and the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer
and Nutrition (EPIC) study. We identified 93 significantly altered metabolites related to glioma
development up to 8 years before diagnosis. Out of these metabolites, a panel of 20 selected
metabolites showed strong disease correlation and a consistent progression pattern toward
diagnosis in both the NSHDS and EPIC cohorts, and they separated future cases from controls
independently of biological sex. The blood metabolite panel also successfully separated both
lower-grade glioma and glioblastoma cases from controls, up to 8 years before diagnosis in
patients within the NSHDS cohort and up to 2 years before diagnosis in EPIC. Pathway enrichment
analysis detected metabolites related to the TCA cycle, Warburg effect, gluconeogenesis, and
cysteine, pyruvate, and tyrosine metabolism as the most affected.
Forlag
American Society for Clinical InvestigationSitering
Löding, Andersson, Kaaks, Schulze, Pala, Urbarova, Amiano, Colorado-Yohar, Guevara, Heath, Chatziioannou, Johansson, Nyberg, Antti, Björkblom, Melin. Altered plasma metabolite levels can be detected years before a glioma diagnosis. JCI Insight. 2023;8(19)Metadata
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