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Medline ® Abstract for Reference 110

of 'Noninvasive assessment of hepatic fibrosis: Overview of serologic and radiographic tests'

110
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Plasma YKL-40: a new potential marker of fibrosis in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis?
AU
Johansen JS, Møller S, Price PA, Bendtsen F, Junge J, Garbarsch C, Henriksen JH
SO
Scand J Gastroenterol. 1997;32(6):582.
 
BACKGROUND: YKL-40 (human cartilage glycoprotein-39, or 38-kDa heparin-binding glycoprotein) is a mammalian member of a protein family that includes bacterial chitinases. YKL-40 mRNA is expressed by human liver and may play a role in tissue remodelling. The aims were to assess whether circulating YKL-40 is released or extracted in the hepatosplanchnic system and to localize YKL-40 in liver tissue.
METHODS: Plasma YKL-40 was determined by radioimmunoassay in 25 patients with liver diseases (alcoholic cirrhosis (n = 20), chronic active hepatitis (n = 2), cirrhosis of unknown aetiology (n = 2), and fatty liver (n = 1) and in 18 subjects with normal liver function during a haemodynamic investigation with catheterization of liver vein and the femoral artery. Immunohistochemical studies of the localization of YKL-40 in cryostal liver biopsy specimens were obtained from eight other patients with alcoholic liver disease.
RESULTS: Plasma YKL-40 was significantly increased in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis (median, 523 micrograms/l; P<0.001) compared with controls (106 micrograms/l), and plasma YKL-40 in the hepatic vein was higher (P<0.01) than that of the artery in both the patients and controls, showing release of YKL-40 from the hepatosplanchnic area. The release rate of YKL-40 from the hepatosplanchnic area was higher in patients with liver disease than in controls (11.0 versus 2.1 micrograms/min, P<0.05). Furthermore, the highest plasma YKL-40 levels were found in patients with a moderate or severe degree of liver fibrosis, and immunohistochemical studies showed positive staining for YKL-40 antigen in areas of the liver biopsy with fibrosis.
CONCLUSIONS: The increased plasma YKL-40 in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis may reflect the remodelling of liver fibrosis.
AD
Dept. of Medicine, Hvidovre Hospital, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
PMID