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Increased Serum S100B Levels in Patients With Epilepsy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Study

Importance: Accumulating evidence suggests that serum levels of S100B may play a role in epilepsy. Objective: We performed a meta-analysis to quantitatively summarize the serum S100B data available for patients with epilepsy. Data source: Two independent researchers conducted a systematic investigat...

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Autores principales: Liang, Kai-Ge, Mu, Rong-Zheng, Liu, Yu, Jiang, Dan, Jia, Tian-Tian, Huang, Yao-Jiang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6532535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31156363
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2019.00456
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author Liang, Kai-Ge
Mu, Rong-Zheng
Liu, Yu
Jiang, Dan
Jia, Tian-Tian
Huang, Yao-Jiang
author_facet Liang, Kai-Ge
Mu, Rong-Zheng
Liu, Yu
Jiang, Dan
Jia, Tian-Tian
Huang, Yao-Jiang
author_sort Liang, Kai-Ge
collection PubMed
description Importance: Accumulating evidence suggests that serum levels of S100B may play a role in epilepsy. Objective: We performed a meta-analysis to quantitatively summarize the serum S100B data available for patients with epilepsy. Data source: Two independent researchers conducted a systematic investigation of the Harvard Hollis+, Open Gray, Clinicaltrials, Wanfangdata, and CNKI databases through Dec 6, 2018, for all studies published in English and Chinese. The search terms included S100B and calcium-binding protein B in combination with epilepsy. Study selection: Original studies and reported data from these search terms are included. Studies where data overlapped with other studies were excluded. Data extraction and synthesis: investigators extracted, pooled and analyzed data from the included studies using a fixed-effects model in the Comprehensive Meta-Analysis3.3 and R software. Main outcomes and measures: Peripheral blood levels of S100B in patients with epilepsy compared with controls. Aberrations in peripheral blood levels of S100B were hypothesized to be related to epilepsy. Results: a fixed-effects meta-analysis of all 18 studies, including 1,057 unique participants, indicated that patients with epilepsy had significantly increased peripheral blood levels of S100B compared to controls (Hedges g = 1.568, 95% CI =1.431–1.706, P < 0.001). Sensitivity analysis showed that no single study significantly influenced the overall association of peripheral blood levels of S100B and epilepsy. Most of the subgroup analyses, including those of country, assay type and publication language, demonstrated a statistically significant association between peripheral blood levels of S100B and epilepsy. Meta-regression analyses indicated that gender (regression coefficient [SE], −0.2524 [0.0641]; 95%CI, −0.3781 to −0.1267; P = 0.0001) and mean age (regression coefficient [SE], −0.1224 [0.0426]; 95% CI, −0.2058 to −0.0390; P = 0.0040) might present serum S100B reductions, but sample size, years, assay type, publication language and country did not show moderating effects on the effect sizes. Furthermore, the trim-and-fill method used to adjust for funnel plot asymmetry in our meta-analysis confirmed that a positive outcome is unlikely to be due to publication bias. Conclusion and relevance: the results of this meta-analysis provide evidence for a significant increase in serum S100B levels in patients with epilepsy. Serum S100B is the most worthwhile biomarker of epilepsy, which is helpful for the clinical diagnosis and prognosis of epilepsy.
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spelling pubmed-65325352019-05-31 Increased Serum S100B Levels in Patients With Epilepsy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Study Liang, Kai-Ge Mu, Rong-Zheng Liu, Yu Jiang, Dan Jia, Tian-Tian Huang, Yao-Jiang Front Neurosci Neuroscience Importance: Accumulating evidence suggests that serum levels of S100B may play a role in epilepsy. Objective: We performed a meta-analysis to quantitatively summarize the serum S100B data available for patients with epilepsy. Data source: Two independent researchers conducted a systematic investigation of the Harvard Hollis+, Open Gray, Clinicaltrials, Wanfangdata, and CNKI databases through Dec 6, 2018, for all studies published in English and Chinese. The search terms included S100B and calcium-binding protein B in combination with epilepsy. Study selection: Original studies and reported data from these search terms are included. Studies where data overlapped with other studies were excluded. Data extraction and synthesis: investigators extracted, pooled and analyzed data from the included studies using a fixed-effects model in the Comprehensive Meta-Analysis3.3 and R software. Main outcomes and measures: Peripheral blood levels of S100B in patients with epilepsy compared with controls. Aberrations in peripheral blood levels of S100B were hypothesized to be related to epilepsy. Results: a fixed-effects meta-analysis of all 18 studies, including 1,057 unique participants, indicated that patients with epilepsy had significantly increased peripheral blood levels of S100B compared to controls (Hedges g = 1.568, 95% CI =1.431–1.706, P < 0.001). Sensitivity analysis showed that no single study significantly influenced the overall association of peripheral blood levels of S100B and epilepsy. Most of the subgroup analyses, including those of country, assay type and publication language, demonstrated a statistically significant association between peripheral blood levels of S100B and epilepsy. Meta-regression analyses indicated that gender (regression coefficient [SE], −0.2524 [0.0641]; 95%CI, −0.3781 to −0.1267; P = 0.0001) and mean age (regression coefficient [SE], −0.1224 [0.0426]; 95% CI, −0.2058 to −0.0390; P = 0.0040) might present serum S100B reductions, but sample size, years, assay type, publication language and country did not show moderating effects on the effect sizes. Furthermore, the trim-and-fill method used to adjust for funnel plot asymmetry in our meta-analysis confirmed that a positive outcome is unlikely to be due to publication bias. Conclusion and relevance: the results of this meta-analysis provide evidence for a significant increase in serum S100B levels in patients with epilepsy. Serum S100B is the most worthwhile biomarker of epilepsy, which is helpful for the clinical diagnosis and prognosis of epilepsy. Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-05-16 /pmc/articles/PMC6532535/ /pubmed/31156363 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2019.00456 Text en Copyright © 2019 Liang, Mu, Liu, Jiang, Jia and Huang. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Liang, Kai-Ge
Mu, Rong-Zheng
Liu, Yu
Jiang, Dan
Jia, Tian-Tian
Huang, Yao-Jiang
Increased Serum S100B Levels in Patients With Epilepsy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Study
title Increased Serum S100B Levels in Patients With Epilepsy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Study
title_full Increased Serum S100B Levels in Patients With Epilepsy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Study
title_fullStr Increased Serum S100B Levels in Patients With Epilepsy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Study
title_full_unstemmed Increased Serum S100B Levels in Patients With Epilepsy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Study
title_short Increased Serum S100B Levels in Patients With Epilepsy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Study
title_sort increased serum s100b levels in patients with epilepsy: a systematic review and meta-analysis study
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6532535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31156363
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2019.00456
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