Paraoxonase‐1 activity evaluation as a diagnostic and prognostic marker in horses and foals

Abstract Background In several species, paraoxonase‐1 (PON‐1) decreases during inflammation, because of the presence of oxidative stress; its measurement recently has been validated in horses, but its role as a clinical biomarker is unknown. Objectives To evaluate sensitivity, specificity and likeli...

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Main Authors: Beatrice Ruggerone, Saverio Paltrinieri, Alessia Giordano, Donatella Scavone, Irene Nocera, Riccardo Rinnovati, Alessandro Spadari, Licia Scacco, Paola Pratelli, Micaela Sgorbini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-03-01
Series:Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.15722
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spelling doaj-70f9e01ca88a4bc5bc09613ad3eadca82020-11-25T02:56:29ZengWileyJournal of Veterinary Internal Medicine0891-66401939-16762020-03-0134294995410.1111/jvim.15722Paraoxonase‐1 activity evaluation as a diagnostic and prognostic marker in horses and foalsBeatrice Ruggerone0Saverio Paltrinieri1Alessia Giordano2Donatella Scavone3Irene Nocera4Riccardo Rinnovati5Alessandro Spadari6Licia Scacco7Paola Pratelli8Micaela Sgorbini9Department of Veterinary Medicine University of Milan Milano ItalyDepartment of Veterinary Medicine University of Milan Milano ItalyDepartment of Veterinary Medicine University of Milan Milano ItalyDepartment of Veterinary Medicine University of Milan Milano ItalyDepartment of Veterinary Sciences University of Pisa Pisa ItalyDepartment of Veterinary Medical Sciences University of Bologna Bologna ItalyDepartment of Veterinary Medical Sciences University of Bologna Bologna ItalyEquivet Roma Hospital, Equine Veterinary Clinic Roma ItalyPrivate Veterinary Practitioner Pisa ItalyDepartment of Veterinary Sciences University of Pisa Pisa ItalyAbstract Background In several species, paraoxonase‐1 (PON‐1) decreases during inflammation, because of the presence of oxidative stress; its measurement recently has been validated in horses, but its role as a clinical biomarker is unknown. Objectives To evaluate sensitivity, specificity and likelihood ratio of PON‐1 activity to identify systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS)‐positive horses or horses with a poor prognosis. Animals One hundred seventy‐two blood samples from 58 sick horses from 3 different veterinary hospitals. Methods In a cross‐sectional study, PON‐1 activity was measured upon admission and at 24‐hour intervals until discharge or death, and results were analyzed based on SIRS status and outcome. Results No statistically significant difference was found in median PON‐1 activity between SIRS and non‐SIRS cases or between survivors and non‐survivors except for mares, in which PON‐1 activity was significantly lower in SIRS‐positive horses (P = .05). The sensitivity of PON‐1 activity in identifying horses with SIRS or negative outcome was low (0.0%‐46.2% depending on the examined group) but its specificity was high (87.0%‐100.0%). However, when PON‐1 is low, the likelihood of death is 2.40‐3.89 times higher than the likelihood of survival. Repeated measurement of PON‐1 after treatment does not predict outcome. Conclusions and Clinical Importance Evaluation of PON‐1 activity in horses with inflammation might be advisable in the future, but only low activity at admission may be relevant in predicting SIRS or negative outcome.https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.15722acute phase proteininflammationoxidative stressprognosisSIRS
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Beatrice Ruggerone
Saverio Paltrinieri
Alessia Giordano
Donatella Scavone
Irene Nocera
Riccardo Rinnovati
Alessandro Spadari
Licia Scacco
Paola Pratelli
Micaela Sgorbini
spellingShingle Beatrice Ruggerone
Saverio Paltrinieri
Alessia Giordano
Donatella Scavone
Irene Nocera
Riccardo Rinnovati
Alessandro Spadari
Licia Scacco
Paola Pratelli
Micaela Sgorbini
Paraoxonase‐1 activity evaluation as a diagnostic and prognostic marker in horses and foals
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine
acute phase protein
inflammation
oxidative stress
prognosis
SIRS
author_facet Beatrice Ruggerone
Saverio Paltrinieri
Alessia Giordano
Donatella Scavone
Irene Nocera
Riccardo Rinnovati
Alessandro Spadari
Licia Scacco
Paola Pratelli
Micaela Sgorbini
author_sort Beatrice Ruggerone
title Paraoxonase‐1 activity evaluation as a diagnostic and prognostic marker in horses and foals
title_short Paraoxonase‐1 activity evaluation as a diagnostic and prognostic marker in horses and foals
title_full Paraoxonase‐1 activity evaluation as a diagnostic and prognostic marker in horses and foals
title_fullStr Paraoxonase‐1 activity evaluation as a diagnostic and prognostic marker in horses and foals
title_full_unstemmed Paraoxonase‐1 activity evaluation as a diagnostic and prognostic marker in horses and foals
title_sort paraoxonase‐1 activity evaluation as a diagnostic and prognostic marker in horses and foals
publisher Wiley
series Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine
issn 0891-6640
1939-1676
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Abstract Background In several species, paraoxonase‐1 (PON‐1) decreases during inflammation, because of the presence of oxidative stress; its measurement recently has been validated in horses, but its role as a clinical biomarker is unknown. Objectives To evaluate sensitivity, specificity and likelihood ratio of PON‐1 activity to identify systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS)‐positive horses or horses with a poor prognosis. Animals One hundred seventy‐two blood samples from 58 sick horses from 3 different veterinary hospitals. Methods In a cross‐sectional study, PON‐1 activity was measured upon admission and at 24‐hour intervals until discharge or death, and results were analyzed based on SIRS status and outcome. Results No statistically significant difference was found in median PON‐1 activity between SIRS and non‐SIRS cases or between survivors and non‐survivors except for mares, in which PON‐1 activity was significantly lower in SIRS‐positive horses (P = .05). The sensitivity of PON‐1 activity in identifying horses with SIRS or negative outcome was low (0.0%‐46.2% depending on the examined group) but its specificity was high (87.0%‐100.0%). However, when PON‐1 is low, the likelihood of death is 2.40‐3.89 times higher than the likelihood of survival. Repeated measurement of PON‐1 after treatment does not predict outcome. Conclusions and Clinical Importance Evaluation of PON‐1 activity in horses with inflammation might be advisable in the future, but only low activity at admission may be relevant in predicting SIRS or negative outcome.
topic acute phase protein
inflammation
oxidative stress
prognosis
SIRS
url https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.15722
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