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Neuroinflammatory markers associate with cognitive decline after major surgery: Findings of an explorative study

Annals of Neurology, 2020

Danielson M., Wiklund A., Granath F., Blennow K., Mkrtchian S., Nellgård B., Oras J., Jonsson Fagerlund M., Granström A., Schening A., Rasmussen L., Erlandsson Harris H., Zetterberg H., Ricksten S., Eriksson L.

Disease areaApplication areaSample typeProducts
Neurology
Pathophysiology
Patient Stratification
Plasma
CSF
Olink Target 96

Olink Target 96

Abstract

Objective

Long‐term cognitive decline is an adverse outcome after major surgery associated with increased risk for mortality and morbidity. We studied the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum biochemical inflammatory response to a standardized orthopedic surgical procedure and the possible association with long‐term changes in cognitive function. We hypothesized that the CSF inflammatory response pattern after surgery would differ in patients having long‐term cognitive decline defined as a composite cognitive z score of ≥1.0 compared to patients without long‐term cognitive decline at 3 months postsurgery.

Methods

Serum and CSF biomarkers of inflammation and blood–brain barrier (BBB) integrity were measured preoperatively and up to 48 hours postoperatively, and cognitive function was assessed preoperatively and at 2 to 5 days and 3 months postoperatively.

Results

Surgery was associated with a pronounced increase in inflammatory biomarkers in both CSF and blood throughout the 48‐hour study period. A principal component (PC) analysis was performed on 52 inflammatory biomarkers. The 2 first PC (PC1 and PC2) construct outcome variables on CSF biomarkers were significantly associated with long‐term cognitive decline at 3 months, but none of the PC construct serum variables showed a significant association with long‐term cognitive decline at 3 months. Patients both with and patients without long‐term cognitive decline showed early transient increases of the astroglial biomarkers S‐100B and glial fibrillary acidic protein in CSF, and in BBB permeability (CSF/serum albumin ratio).

Interpretation

Surgery rapidly triggers a temporal neuroinflammatory response closely associated with long‐term cognitive outcome postsurgery. The findings of this explorative study require validation in a larger surgical patient cohort. Ann Neurol 2020;87:370–382

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