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Publication Date:
October 2007
ISSN:
1437-4331
DOI:
10.1515/CCLM.2007.279

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Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (CCLM)

Published in Association with the International Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine and the European Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine

Editor-in-Chief: Plebani, Mario

Editorial Board Member: Lippi, Giuseppe / Gillery, Philippe / Kazmierczak, Steven / Lackner, Karl J. / Melichar, Bohuslav / Siest, Gérard / Whitfield, John B. / Abi Fadel, Marianne / Alvarez Menendez, Francisco V. / Azzazy, Hassan M.E. / Diamandis, Eleftherios P. / Eckardstein, Arnold / Favaloro, Emmanuel J. / Griesmacher, Andrea / Herrmann, Wolfgang / Hoffmann, Johannes J.M.L. / Hooijkaas, Herbert / Ichihara, Kiyoshi / Kaabachi, Naziha / Kim, Jeong-Ho / Korte, Wolfgang / Kroupis, Christos / Lai, Leslie Charles / Lam, Wai Kei Christopher / Marc, Janja / Miyoshi, Eiji / Özben, Tomris / Palicka, Vladimir / Panteghini, Mauro / Queralto, Jose M. / Scartezini, Marileia / Simundic, Ana-Maria / Tsongalis, Gregory J. / Wallemacq, Pierre E. / Yan, Shengkai / Young, Ian S. / Chiu, Rossa Wai Kwun / Ghosh, Debabrata / Kappelmayer, Janos / Lehmann, Sylvain / Sypniewska, Grazyna

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Association of classical and related inflammatory markers with high-sensitivity C-reactive protein in healthy individuals: results from the Stanislas cohort

Hind Berrahmoune1 / Bernard Herbeth2 / John V. Lamont3 / Daniel Lambert4 / Stefan Blankenberg5 / Laurence Tiret6 / Peter S. FitzGerald7 / Gérard Siest8 / Sophie Visvikis-Siest9

1INSERM, U525, équipe 4, Nancy, France

2INSERM, U525, équipe 4, Nancy, France

3Randox Laboratories Ltd., Crumlin, Antrim, UK

4INSERM, U525, équipe 4, Nancy, France

5Department of Medicine II, Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz, Mainz, Germany

6INSERM, U525, Paris, France

7Randox Laboratories Ltd., Crumlin, Antrim, UK

8INSERM, U525, équipe 4, Nancy, France and Université Henry Poincaré – Nancy I, Faculté de Pharmacie, Nancy, France

9INSERM, U525, équipe 4, Nancy, France

Corresponding author: Dr. Sophie Visvikis-Siest, INSERM U525, 30 rue Lionnois, 54000 Nancy, France Phone: +33-3-83682184, Fax: +33-3-83321322,

Citation Information: Clinical Chemical Laboratory Medicine. Volume 45, Issue 10, Pages 1339–1346, ISSN (Online) 14374331, ISSN (Print) 14346621, DOI: 10.1515/CCLM.2007.279, October 2007

Publication History:
Received:
2007-03-30
Accepted:
2007-06-01
Published Online:
2007-10-10

Abstract

Background: Although high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) has emerged as a cardiovascular marker, questions arise regarding the relative information provided by other inflammatory molecules. Therefore, as a first step, we examined interrelationships between serum hs-CRP concentrations and inflammatory, adhesion and growth factors in healthy adults.

Methods: Circulating concentrations of hs-CRP, haptoglobin, orosomucoid, interleukin-6 (IL-6), IL-8, IL-18, tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), TNF-receptor II (TNF-RII), E-, P-, and L-selectins, intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, endothelial growth factor (EGF), vascular EGF (VEGF), insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) and IGF-binding protein (IGFBP-3) were measured in 154 men and 161 women of the Stanislas cohort. Leukocyte and platelet counts were also determined.

Results: Correlations were significant between hs-CRP concentrations and leukocyte and platelet counts, as well as haptoglobin, orosomucoid, IL-6, and ICAM-1 concentrations (p≤0.001). Correlation coefficients for ICAM-1 were higher in men than in women (p≤0.05). When stratifying subjects according to hs-CRP levels, the group with high hs-CRP levels had significantly higher haptoglobin and orosomucoid concentrations than the others, in addition to higher leukocyte counts and IL-6 concentrations in women, and platelet counts and ICAM-1 concentrations in men.

Conclusions: Further studies are warranted to explain the association pattern for hs-CRP. Partition of these factors according to their association with hs-CRP concentration opens a new perspective for choice of the best factors in terms of cardiovascular risk in relation to hs-CRP, while non-associated markers could be used to give additional information.

Clin Chem Lab Med 2007;45:1339–46.

Keywords: atherosclerosis; cellular adhesion; growth factors; high-sensitivity C-reactive protein; inflammation

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