From the Journals

Liver enzyme a marker of disease progression in primary biliary cholangitis


 

REPORTING FROM SCIENTIFIC REPORTS


Results showed that the ATX levels of patients with PBC were significantly higher than those of controls (median, 0.97 mg/L vs. 0.76 mg/L, respectively; P less than .0001).

Autotaxin results were validated by biopsy-proven histologic assessment: Patients with PBC that was classified as Nakanuma’s stage I, II, III, and IV had median ATX concentrations of 0.70, 0.80, 0.87, 1.03, and 1.70 mg/L, respectively, which demonstrated significant increases in concentration of ATX with disease stage (r = 0.53; P less than .0001). The researchers confirmed this finding using Scheuer’s classification of the disease (r = 0.43; P less than .0001).

The researchers noted that their findings were also “well correlated with other established noninvasive fibrosis markers, indicating ATX to be a reliable clinical surrogate marker to predict disease progression in patients with PBC.”

For example, autotaxin levels correlated with W. floribunda agglutinin–positive Mac-2 binding protein (r = 0.51; P less than .0001) and the fibrosis index based on four factors index (r = 0.51; P less than .0001).

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