• Journal of neurotrauma · Apr 2024

    Discovery of Alpha-1-Antichymotrypsin as a Marker of Delayed Recovery from Concussion in Children.

    • Ella E K Swaney, Franz E Babl, Vanessa C Rausa, Nicholas Anderson, HearpsStephen J CSJCMurdoch Children's Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia., Georgia Parkin, Gene Hart-Smith, Thiri Zaw, Luke Carroll, Michael Takagi, Marc L Seal, Gavin A Davis, Vicki Anderson, and Vera Ignjatovic.
    • Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
    • J. Neurotrauma. 2024 Apr 10.

    AbstractOf the four million children who experience a concussion each year, 30-50% of children will experience delayed recovery, where they will continue to experience symptoms more than two weeks after their injury. Delayed recovery from concussion encompasses emotional, behavioral, physical, and cognitive symptoms, and as such, there is an increased focus on developing an objective tool to determine risk of delayed recovery. This study aimed to identify a blood protein signature predictive of delayed recovery from concussion in children. Plasma samples were collected from children who presented to the Emergency Department at the Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, within 48h post-concussion. This study involved a discovery and validation phase. For the discovery phase, untargeted proteomics analysis was performed using single window acquisition of all theoretical mass spectra to identify blood proteins differentially abundant in samples from children with and without delayed recovery from concussion. A subset of these proteins was then validated in a separate participant cohort using multiple reaction monitoring and enzyme linked immunosorbent assay. A blood protein signature predictive of delayed recovery from concussion was modeled using a Support Vector Machine, a machine learning approach. In the discovery phase, 22 blood proteins were differentially abundant in age- and sex-matched samples from children with (n = 9) and without (n = 9) delayed recovery from concussion, six of whom were chosen for validation. In the validation phase, alpha-1-ACT was shown to be significantly lower in children with delayed recovery (n = 12) compared with those without delayed recovery (n = 28), those with orthopedic injuries (n = 7) and healthy controls (n = 33). A model consisting of alpha-1-ACT concentration stratified children based on recovery from concussion with an 0.88 area under the curve. We have identified that alpha-1-ACT differentiates between children at risk of delayed recovery from those without delayed recovery from concussion. To our knowledge, this is the first study to identify alpha-1-ACT as a potential marker of delayed recovery from concussion in children. Multi-site studies are required to further validate this finding before use in a clinical setting.

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