Diagnostic Cerebrospinal Fluid Biomarker Discovery and Validation in Patients with Central Nervous System Infections
Thanh TT., Casals-Pascual C., Ny NTH., Ngoc NM., Geskus R., Nhu LNT., Hong NTT., Duc DT., Thu DDA., Uyen PN., Ngoc VB., Chau LTM., Quynh VX., Hanh NHH., Thuong NTT., Diem LT., Hanh BTB., Hang VTT., Oanh PKN., Fischer R., Phu NH., Nghia HDT., Chau NVV., Hoa NT., Kessler BM., Thwaites G., Tan LV.
ABSTRACTBackgroundCentral nervous system (CNS) infections are common causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Rapid, accurate identification of the likely cause is essential for clinical management and the early initiation of antimicrobial therapy, which potentially improves clinical outcome.MethodsWe applied liquid chromatography tandem mass-spectrometry on 45 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from a cohort of adults with/without CNS infections to discover potential diagnostic protein biomarkers. We then validated the diagnostic performance of a selected biomarker candidate in an independent cohort of 364 consecutively treated adults with CNS infections admitted to a referral hospital in southern Vietnam.ResultsIn the discovery cohort, we identified lipocalin 2 (LCN2) as a potential biomarker of bacterial meningitis. The analysis of the validation cohort showed that LCN2 could discriminate bacterial meningitis from other CNS infections, including tuberculous meningitis, cryptococcal meningitis and viral/antibody-mediated encephalitis (sensitivity: 0.88 (95% confident interval (CI): 0.77–0.94), specificity: 0.91 (95%CI: 0.88–0.94) and diagnostic odd ratio: 73.8 (95%CI: 31.8–171.4)). LCN2 outperformed other CSF markers (leukocytes, glucose, protein and lactate) commonly used in routine care worldwide. The combination of LCN2 and these four routine CSF markers resulted in the highest diagnostic performance for bacterial meningitis (area under receiver-operating-characteristic-curve 0.96; 95%CI: 0.93–0.99).ConclusionsOur results suggest that LCN2 is a sensitive and specific biomarker for discriminating bacterial meningitis from a broad spectrum of CNS infections. A prospective study is needed to further assess the diagnostic utility of LCN2 in the diagnosis and management of CNS infections.