Startseite Serum intact fibroblast growth factor 23 in healthy paediatric population
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Serum intact fibroblast growth factor 23 in healthy paediatric population

  • Malgorzata Stanczyk ORCID logo EMAIL logo , Slawomir Chrul , Krystyna Wyka und Marcin Tkaczyk
Veröffentlicht/Copyright: 6. Juli 2021

Abstract

Introduction

It is believed that fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23) can become an early biomarker of chronic kidney disease progression. Data on FGF23 age dependency are inconsistent. We present the results of the cross-sectional study concerning FGF23 levels in healthy Polish children.

Material and methods

This study was conducted in 121 children aged 0–18 years. Kidney function and intact FGF23 levels in serum were assessed. Differences between age groups and according to gender were analysed.

Results

The difference in FGF23 between age groups and according to gender was statistically insignificant. In the youngest and the oldest group, a trend to higher FGF23 levels was observed. FGF23 level in girls tended to be higher than boys, apart from the age group between 1 and 4 years. There was a negative correlation between eGFR and FGF23 (r = −0.26, p < 0.05) – strong in girls (r = −0.38, p < 0.05), but not in boys. In each age group, we found no significant correlation between eGFR and FGF23.

Conclusions

Our study supports the evidence that the FGF23 level in paediatric population is not age or sex dependent. The results can serve as a reference point under clinical conditions and for other studies on the topic.

1 Introduction

Fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23) was described in 2000 as a phosphaturic hormone acting as a regulator of calcium–phosphate balance affecting serum phosphates, parathormone (PTH) and vitamin D (1,25-(OH)2-vitamin D3) levels [1,2,3]. Protein FGF23 of molecular weight 32 kDa is synthesised mainly by osteocytes and osteoblasts [4]. FGF23 acts through FGF receptors in cooperation with Klotho protein. Activated receptors suppress the function of two sodium-phosphate co-transporters in proximal convoluted tubules in kidneys (NPT2 and NPT2c) inducing phosphaturia and suppressing the formation of 1.25-dihydroxy-vitamin D by inhibiting renal 1α-hydroxylase activity [4,5]. FGF23 circulates in serum in two forms – intact, active form and inactivated c-terminal fraction (cFGF23) [6]. It is confirmed that in end-stage kidney disease, the FGF23 level in serum increases [7,8,9]. A growing number of clinical observations and experimental research involving animals shows that the FGF23 serum level increases significantly in chronic kidney disease much earlier than previously used biomarkers (creatinine, phosphates, vitamin D and PTH) [10]. Therefore, it is believed that it can become the early and sensitive biomarker of progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD) [11]. In view of physiological age dependency of serum calcium and phosphates, it is worth to investigate if FGF23 is also changing with age, especially since some data suggest such a relation [12]. In this article, we present the results of the cross-sectional study concerning FGF23 levels in the healthy Polish children population (Figures 1 and 2).

Figure 1 
               FGF23 levels in age groups – total and with sex distribution. Median of values is presented, p > 0.05.
Figure 1

FGF23 levels in age groups – total and with sex distribution. Median of values is presented, p > 0.05.

Figure 2 
               Scatter plot of serum FGF23 depending of the age.
Figure 2

Scatter plot of serum FGF23 depending of the age.

2 Materials and methods

This study was conducted in children aged 0–18 years randomly selected among children hospitalised on planned reasons in the Department of Pediatrics, Immunology and Nephrology of Polish Mother’s Memorial Hospital Research Institute, Lodz, Poland. The study group comprised of patients with no clinically significant disease entities who were hospitalised in our centre for diagnostic reasons (i.e. diagnostics of recurrent respiratory tract infections, abdominal pain) or minor surgical procedures. Eventually, generally healthy children were enrolled into the study, with negative history of chronic diseases, including chronic kidney disease, heart diseases, gastrointestinal diseases, endocrine disorders and other conditions, which could affect calcium–phosphate balance. To confirm the lack of health conditions that could interfere with the study aims, routine biochemical assessments were performed, and the results referred to reference ranges for age and sex when applicable. All results were within reference ranges. Patients with abnormal results were excluded from the study.

Children with vitamin D deficiency (<30 ng/mL) or after trauma including bone fracture within 3 months before enrolment were excluded. Local Bioethics Committee approved the study protocol. Consent of the caregivers was mandatory, as well as in the case of children aged 14 years and older.

Kidney function was assessed by creatinine levels and the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) by Schwartz equation (k × height [cm]/serum creatinine), with k values different for age and sex groups (k = 0.450, 0.55, 0.7 for children aged <12 months, <12 years, and girls ≥13 years and boys ≥13 years, respectively).

Intact FGF23 level in serum was assessed with ELISA kits (R&D Systems, Inc., USA) with 3 pg/mL sensitivity. Blood sample for assessment was collected fasting in the process of planned control biochemistry tests. Until assessment, the samples were stored at −80°C, but no longer than 3 months.

Normality of distribution was tested with the Shapiro–Wilk test. Given the nonnormal distribution of FGF23 levels, its values were described by a median with mean deviation. The differences in proportion were tested with the chi-squared test. Pearson’s correlation test and Spearman’s rank test were used to assess proportion of correlation between variables. A significance level of p < 0.05 was considered significant.

3 Results

This study was conducted in 121 children (M, 66, p > 0.05). Sex distribution, body mass index (BMI), kidney function expressed as eGFR (median and interquartile range), and FGF23 levels (median and mean deviation) in age groups are presented in Table 1, and results of biochemical assessments during enrolment to the study are presented in Table 2. Haemoglobin concentration did not differ between boys and girls (13.2 vs 12.8 g/dL respectively, p = 0.14).

Table 1

Sex distribution, BMI, serum FGF23 level and eGFR in the age groups

Age (years) Boys Girls Total BMI (kg/m2) Median (interquartile range) FGF23 level (pg/mL) Median (99pc) eGFR (mL/min/1.73 m2) Median (interquartile range)
<1 8 11 19 14.5 (13.6–15.4) 22.73 (68.39) 106.5 (86.62–129.00)
1–4 19 9 28 15.8 (14.9–17.2) 11.44 (56.74) 143.00 (129.25–157.20)
5–9 19 13 32 15.6 (14.8–16.8) 9.25 (53.96) 170.50 (155.37–196.16)
10–14 14 13 27 19.9 (17.0–21.9) 12.27 (32.55) 153.12 (143.50–173.00)
15–18 6 9 15 20.0 (17.6–22.6) 17.03 (48.08) 144.8 (124.9–165.81)
Total 66 55 121
Table 2

Basic biochemical parameters assessed at the enrolment to the study

Parameter Mean (SD) Median (range)
Serum creatinine (mg/dL) 0.45 (0.19)
0.4 (0.2–0.9)
Estimated glomerular filtration rate (mL/min/1.73 m2) 147 (35)
146.7 (63.3–212.7)
Haemoglobin (g/dL) 13 (1.5)
13.1 (10.5–15.8)
White blood cell count (cells/µL) 8,990 (3,600)
7,000 (4,170–17,250)
C-reactive protein (mg/dL) <0.5
Alanine aminotransaminase (IU/L) 28 (10)
31.5 (10–45)
Serum calcium (mmol/L) 2.58 (0.12)
2.76 (2.48–2.76)
Serum phosphates (mmol/L) 1.77 (0.32)
1.76 (1.31–1.8)
25-OH vitamin D (ng/mL) 38.3 (30–63.8)
PTH (pg/mL) 30.6 (20.81–43.87)

The difference in FGF23 between age groups was statistically insignificant. 99pc values for different age groups were between 32.55 pg/mL in 10–14 years group and 68.39 pg/mL in the group younger than 1 year.

In the youngest and the oldest group, a trend to higher FGF23 levels was observed but without statistical significance.

Differences between girls and boys were insignificant. FGF23 level in girls tended to be higher than boys, apart from the age group between 1 and 4 years.

According to the kidney function, we have found a negative correlation between eGFR and FGF23 (r = −0.26, p < 0.05). We have found strong negative correlation between FGF23 and eGFR in girls (r = −0.38, p < 0.05) but not in boys. In each age group, we found no significant correlation between eGFR and FGF23.

4 Discussion

Many medical disorders were described in which oversynthesis of FGF23 results in hypophosphatemia, i.e., X-linked familial rickets, autosomal dominant and recessive forms of hypophosphatemia, and tumour-induced osteomalacia [1,13,14]. Clinical studies revealed a positive correlation between serum FGF23 level and higher left heart ventricle mass with a trend to its hypertrophy, deterioration of coronary arteries structure, and endothelial dysfunction [11,15]. Ix et al. study in the adult population revealed that during the progression of chronic kidney disease, FGF23 levels begin to increase under eGFR of 90 mL/min/1.73 m2 [16]. In the paediatric population with CKD assessed by Portale et al., cFGF23 increased already at eGFR of 30–90 mL/min/1.73 m2 [9]. In the majority of the CKD participants, higher values of FGF23 were observed before the increase of serum parathyroid hormone and phosphorus. The authors concluded that in children with predialysis CKD, high cFGF23 is the earliest detectable abnormality of mineral metabolism. Therefore, the hypothesis that the serum FGF23 level could outrun first biochemical symptoms of calcium–phosphate imbalance in patients with early stages of chronic kidney disease is justified. Serum FGF23 level could be a promising early marker of calcium–phosphate imbalance giving an opportunity to react by implementing adequate therapy before the first symptom occurs.

Calcium–phosphate balance markers differ according to their age dependency. In the paediatric population, serum 1,25-hydroxylated vitamin D and PTH are age independent. Calcium and phosphate levels drop with age [17]. As FGF23 is a phosphaturic hormone, it could be hypothesised that the lower serum phosphates the higher serum FGF23. In the study by Portale et al. on CKD paediatric patients, it was showed that in patients with eGFR 30–69 mL/min/1.73 m2 when the increase of FGF23 is already marked, serum phosphates are the lowest reflecting probably FGF’s23 phosphaturic action [9]. In the later stages of CKD, the overactivity of parathyroids and kidney phosphaturic disability prevail with the increase of phosphataemia [18]. Conversely, considering healthy children, Gkentzi et al. in a study on 159 children aged 2–18 years found a weak positive correlation between serum phosphate and FGF23 [19]. This finding is inconsistent with the study by Mitchell et al. who demonstrated that despite phosphate levels in healthy populations correlate negatively with the age (r = −0.49, p < 0.001), serum FGF23 levels are not directly associated with phosphates serum and urinary levels [20]. They concluded that FGF23 is not associated with age-related changes in phosphates.

Data on age dependency of FGF23 are incoherent. Mitchell et al. in their analysis of 90 girls aged 9–18 years concluded about lack of correlation between age and FGF23 or c-terminal FGF23 [20]. The authors hypothesised that similar to age-independent PTH, FGF23 rather than being the primary regulator of serum and urinary phosphate excretion acts as a system defending the phosphate set point determined by other factors. Gkentzi et al. also did not observe an association of either form of FGF23 with age [19]. However, Fischer et al. revealed by analysis of 424 healthy children that cFGF23 is significantly age dependent with highest values in early infancy and adolescence ((r = −0.22, p < 0.01) [12]. Our results did not support such a hypothesis – we did not notice a correlation between FGF23 serum levels and age. We found that FGF23 in healthy paediatric patients does not differ between girls and boys as well. We have noticed only a trend for higher values in girls and the youngest and the oldest group of children, without statistical significance. Fischer et al. observed similar but significant distribution of c-terminal FGF23 as FGF23 in our study – higher levels in infancy and until 3 years of age, stable low levels in childhood, and again increase in those older than 12 years. In contrast to our study in the cited paper, the c-terminal inactive FGF23 was assessed, whereas we assessed active FGF23. This could be suggestive that c-terminal but not intact FGF23 is age dependent. Moreover, in that article, it was stated that cFGF-23 was positively correlated with serum phosphate concentration. We found no such correlation – it could be associated with different phosphate status in assessed children.

In our study the youngest children tended to have higher levels of FGF23. This is also the age group with the highest phosphate values, as the reflection of bone formation. The explanation of this phenomenon seems very interesting and important. One of the FGF23 functions is protection from excessive levels of phosphorus negatively affecting osteoblasts resulting eventually in cell death [2]. Hypothetically higher phosphates induce FGF23 to stimulate phosphate renal excretion and suppress intestinal absorption. The precise mechanism of association among dietary phosphate load, high serum phosphate, and increased synthesis of FGF23 is still not clear [2,21,22]. Physiologically associated with bone formation and growing higher phosphates in infancy and early childhood could be explained by this hypothesis. But it is still unclear why adolescents, despite lower levels of phosphates, tended to have higher serum FGF23. Supposedly, it could be connected with a higher burden of phosphates in the western diet – FGF23 here would be also acting as protection from excessive phosphate load. In the present study, we found no correlation between phosphate levels and FGF23 values – the FGF23 values in infancy and adolescence were not reflected by higher phosphate concentrations in corresponding age groups. However, it needs to be emphasised that FGF23 levels were not different in age groups, and the only trend was marked without significance. Lack of association between FG23 and phosphate levels in the healthy population should not be translated into CKD population as the protective FGF23 action against excessive phosphate burden was found [2].

We found a tendency to higher values of FGF23 in the youngest children and adolescent girls. Such a trend could be hypothetically explained by associations between FGF23 and iron deficiency. Studies performed in adult and paediatric population showed that intact and c-terminal FGF23 is correlated with poor iron status, and a decrease in FGF23 level can be noticed after iron supplementation [23,24,25]. The pathophysiology of this finding still needs clarifying. Infants of mothers with pregnancy iron deficiency and adolescent girls can be considered as iron deficiency risk populations. However, in our study, we did not assess the iron status of patients because they all were healthy without anaemia. In light of the former and FGF23 level, age independency considerations on the association between FGF23 and iron status can be only hypothetical.

In different conditions affecting calcium–-phosphate balance characterised by stimulation of FGF23, its increase is in general very high, way beyond upper range limits for the healthy population. In a small Polish study, in 37 children assessed with chronic kidney disease stage 3, median plasma FGF23 level ranged from 179 to 750 ng/L (1 ng/L = 1 pg/mL), while in the control healthy group, it was 55 ng/L (IQR, 30–108) [8]. In Portale et al. study the median plasma FGF23 level was 2.4 times higher in CKD 2–4 patients than in 42 healthy children of comparable age of 12 ± 4 years (138 RU/mL vs. 57 RU/mL, respectively; according to the manufacturer 1 RU/mL is roughly 2 pg/mL). Individuals with CKD 2 had median FGF23 equal to 93 RU/mL (around 200 pg/mL) without any other changes in calcium–phosphate balance [9]. Noteworthy, in this study, as “healthy” were considered children whose eGFR was >70 mL/min/1.73m2. Therefore, the children with mild kidney dysfunction were not excluded, so obtained normal value 0f FGF23 could be overestimated. In 2012, Fischer et al. published paediatric age- and gender-related percentile charts and z-scores for cFGF-23. The 97th percentile of cFGF23 ranged from 324 kRU/L in infants to 100 kRU/L in 18 years old [12].

It is difficult to compare all available data on the subject because of different methodologies concerning the assessed marker – some of studies based on intact FGF and others on c-terminal FGF23. Some data suggest superiority of c-terminal FGF23 assessment because of lower variability of results, the better precision of assessment, and better correlation with worsening of kidney function [26,27]. In our study, intact FGF23 level was assessed so it is impossible to compare the results with the German study. In general, measured levels of cFGF23 are higher than intact FGF23, but there are no data about converting one to another. In our healthy population, we have noticed a small range span of intact FGF in each age group. The 99th percentile for FGF23 range in each group varied from 32.55 pg/mL in children aged 10–14 years to 68.39 pg/mL in children younger than 1 year. As reported by other studies, values under disease conditions are significantly higher than detected in the healthy population of our study [8]. Given the unavailability of serum intact FGF23 reference values in paediatric population, our study provided valuable contribution to the interpretation of calcium–phosphate disturbances. Combined with other still scarce data on intact FGF23 values in healthy children, we provide an useful tool for recognising the early onset of otherwise asymptomatic early stages of bone disorders in children of the population at risk, especially CKD children. Values of intact FGF23 measured in our population can serve as a reference point under clinical conditions and for other studies on the topic.

5 Conclusion

Our study supports the evidence that FGF23 level in paediatric population is not age or sex dependent.

  1. Funding information: No funding.

  2. Conflict of interest statement: Authors state no conflict of interest.

  3. Data availability statement: The datasets generated during and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

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Received: 2020-07-22
Revised: 2021-03-28
Accepted: 2021-04-20
Published Online: 2021-07-06

© 2021 Malgorzata Stanczyk et al., published by De Gruyter

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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  70. FGF16 regulated by miR-520b enhances the cell proliferation of lung cancer
  71. Platelet-rich fibrin: Basics of biological actions and protocol modifications
  72. Accurate diagnosis of prostate cancer using logistic regression
  73. miR-377 inhibition enhances the survival of trophoblast cells via upregulation of FNDC5 in gestational diabetes mellitus
  74. Prognostic significance of TRIM28 expression in patients with breast carcinoma
  75. Integrative bioinformatics analysis of KPNA2 in six major human cancers
  76. Exosomal-mediated transfer of OIP5-AS1 enhanced cell chemoresistance to trastuzumab in breast cancer via up-regulating HMGB3 by sponging miR-381-3p
  77. A four-lncRNA signature for predicting prognosis of recurrence patients with gastric cancer
  78. Knockdown of circ_0003204 alleviates oxidative low-density lipoprotein-induced human umbilical vein endothelial cells injury: Circulating RNAs could explain atherosclerosis disease progression
  79. Propofol postpones colorectal cancer development through circ_0026344/miR-645/Akt/mTOR signal pathway
  80. Knockdown of lncRNA TapSAKI alleviates LPS-induced injury in HK-2 cells through the miR-205/IRF3 pathway
  81. COVID-19 severity in relation to sociodemographics and vitamin D use
  82. Clinical analysis of 11 cases of nocardiosis
  83. Cis-regulatory elements in conserved non-coding sequences of nuclear receptor genes indicate for crosstalk between endocrine systems
  84. Four long noncoding RNAs act as biomarkers in lung adenocarcinoma
  85. Real-world evidence of cytomegalovirus reactivation in non-Hodgkin lymphomas treated with bendamustine-containing regimens
  86. Relation between IL-8 level and obstructive sleep apnea syndrome
  87. circAGFG1 sponges miR-28-5p to promote non-small-cell lung cancer progression through modulating HIF-1α level
  88. Nomogram prediction model for renal anaemia in IgA nephropathy patients
  89. Effect of antibiotic use on the efficacy of nivolumab in the treatment of advanced/metastatic non-small cell lung cancer: A meta-analysis
  90. NDRG2 inhibition facilitates angiogenesis of hepatocellular carcinoma
  91. A nomogram for predicting metabolic steatohepatitis: The combination of NAMPT, RALGDS, GADD45B, FOSL2, RTP3, and RASD1
  92. Clinical and prognostic features of MMP-2 and VEGF in AEG patients
  93. The value of miR-510 in the prognosis and development of colon cancer
  94. Functional implications of PABPC1 in the development of ovarian cancer
  95. Prognostic value of preoperative inflammation-based predictors in patients with bladder carcinoma after radical cystectomy
  96. Sublingual immunotherapy increases Treg/Th17 ratio in allergic rhinitis
  97. Prediction of improvement after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction
  98. Effluent Osteopontin levels reflect the peritoneal solute transport rate
  99. circ_0038467 promotes PM2.5-induced bronchial epithelial cell dysfunction
  100. Significance of miR-141 and miR-340 in cervical squamous cell carcinoma
  101. Association between hair cortisol concentration and metabolic syndrome
  102. Microvessel density as a prognostic indicator of prostate cancer: A systematic review and meta-analysis
  103. Characteristics of BCR–ABL gene variants in patients of chronic myeloid leukemia
  104. Knee alterations in rheumatoid arthritis: Comparison of US and MRI
  105. Long non-coding RNA TUG1 aggravates cerebral ischemia and reperfusion injury by sponging miR-493-3p/miR-410-3p
  106. lncRNA MALAT1 regulated ATAD2 to facilitate retinoblastoma progression via miR-655-3p
  107. Development and validation of a nomogram for predicting severity in patients with hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome: A retrospective study
  108. Analysis of COVID-19 outbreak origin in China in 2019 using differentiation method for unusual epidemiological events
  109. Laparoscopic versus open major liver resection for hepatocellular carcinoma: A case-matched analysis of short- and long-term outcomes
  110. Travelers’ vaccines and their adverse events in Nara, Japan
  111. Association between Tfh and PGA in children with Henoch–Schönlein purpura
  112. Can exchange transfusion be replaced by double-LED phototherapy?
  113. circ_0005962 functions as an oncogene to aggravate NSCLC progression
  114. Circular RNA VANGL1 knockdown suppressed viability, promoted apoptosis, and increased doxorubicin sensitivity through targeting miR-145-5p to regulate SOX4 in bladder cancer cells
  115. Serum intact fibroblast growth factor 23 in healthy paediatric population
  116. Algorithm of rational approach to reconstruction in Fournier’s disease
  117. A meta-analysis of exosome in the treatment of spinal cord injury
  118. Src-1 and SP2 promote the proliferation and epithelial–mesenchymal transition of nasopharyngeal carcinoma
  119. Dexmedetomidine may decrease the bupivacaine toxicity to heart
  120. Hypoxia stimulates the migration and invasion of osteosarcoma via up-regulating the NUSAP1 expression
  121. Long noncoding RNA XIST knockdown relieves the injury of microglia cells after spinal cord injury by sponging miR-219-5p
  122. External fixation via the anterior inferior iliac spine for proximal femoral fractures in young patients
  123. miR-128-3p reduced acute lung injury induced by sepsis via targeting PEL12
  124. HAGLR promotes neuron differentiation through the miR-130a-3p-MeCP2 axis
  125. Phosphoglycerate mutase 2 is elevated in serum of patients with heart failure and correlates with the disease severity and patient’s prognosis
  126. Cell population data in identifying active tuberculosis and community-acquired pneumonia
  127. Prognostic value of microRNA-4521 in non-small cell lung cancer and its regulatory effect on tumor progression
  128. Mean platelet volume and red blood cell distribution width is associated with prognosis in premature neonates with sepsis
  129. 3D-printed porous scaffold promotes osteogenic differentiation of hADMSCs
  130. Association of gene polymorphisms with women urinary incontinence
  131. Influence of COVID-19 pandemic on stress levels of urologic patients
  132. miR-496 inhibits proliferation via LYN and AKT pathway in gastric cancer
  133. miR-519d downregulates LEP expression to inhibit preeclampsia development
  134. Comparison of single- and triple-port VATS for lung cancer: A meta-analysis
  135. Fluorescent light energy modulates healing in skin grafted mouse model
  136. Silencing CDK6-AS1 inhibits LPS-induced inflammatory damage in HK-2 cells
  137. Predictive effect of DCE-MRI and DWI in brain metastases from NSCLC
  138. Severe postoperative hyperbilirubinemia in congenital heart disease
  139. Baicalin improves podocyte injury in rats with diabetic nephropathy by inhibiting PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling pathway
  140. Clinical factors predicting ureteral stent failure in patients with external ureteral compression
  141. Novel H2S donor proglumide-ADT-OH protects HUVECs from ox-LDL-induced injury through NF-κB and JAK/SATA pathway
  142. Triple-Endobutton and clavicular hook: A propensity score matching analysis
  143. Long noncoding RNA MIAT inhibits the progression of diabetic nephropathy and the activation of NF-κB pathway in high glucose-treated renal tubular epithelial cells by the miR-182-5p/GPRC5A axis
  144. Serum exosomal miR-122-5p, GAS, and PGR in the non-invasive diagnosis of CAG
  145. miR-513b-5p inhibits the proliferation and promotes apoptosis of retinoblastoma cells by targeting TRIB1
  146. Fer exacerbates renal fibrosis and can be targeted by miR-29c-3p
  147. The diagnostic and prognostic value of miR-92a in gastric cancer: A systematic review and meta-analysis
  148. Prognostic value of α2δ1 in hypopharyngeal carcinoma: A retrospective study
  149. No significant benefit of moderate-dose vitamin C on severe COVID-19 cases
  150. circ_0000467 promotes the proliferation, metastasis, and angiogenesis in colorectal cancer cells through regulating KLF12 expression by sponging miR-4766-5p
  151. Downregulation of RAB7 and Caveolin-1 increases MMP-2 activity in renal tubular epithelial cells under hypoxic conditions
  152. Educational program for orthopedic surgeons’ influences for osteoporosis
  153. Expression and function analysis of CRABP2 and FABP5, and their ratio in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma
  154. GJA1 promotes hepatocellular carcinoma progression by mediating TGF-β-induced activation and the epithelial–mesenchymal transition of hepatic stellate cells
  155. lncRNA-ZFAS1 promotes the progression of endometrial carcinoma by targeting miR-34b to regulate VEGFA expression
  156. Anticoagulation is the answer in treating noncritical COVID-19 patients
  157. Effect of late-onset hemorrhagic cystitis on PFS after haplo-PBSCT
  158. Comparison of Dako HercepTest and Ventana PATHWAY anti-HER2 (4B5) tests and their correlation with silver in situ hybridization in lung adenocarcinoma
  159. VSTM1 regulates monocyte/macrophage function via the NF-κB signaling pathway
  160. Comparison of vaginal birth outcomes in midwifery-led versus physician-led setting: A propensity score-matched analysis
  161. Treatment of osteoporosis with teriparatide: The Slovenian experience
  162. New targets of morphine postconditioning protection of the myocardium in ischemia/reperfusion injury: Involvement of HSP90/Akt and C5a/NF-κB
  163. Superenhancer–transcription factor regulatory network in malignant tumors
  164. β-Cell function is associated with osteosarcopenia in middle-aged and older nonobese patients with type 2 diabetes: A cross-sectional study
  165. Clinical features of atypical tuberculosis mimicking bacterial pneumonia
  166. Proteoglycan-depleted regions of annular injury promote nerve ingrowth in a rabbit disc degeneration model
  167. Effect of electromagnetic field on abortion: A systematic review and meta-analysis
  168. miR-150-5p affects AS plaque with ASMC proliferation and migration by STAT1
  169. MALAT1 promotes malignant pleural mesothelioma by sponging miR-141-3p
  170. Effects of remifentanil and propofol on distant organ lung injury in an ischemia–reperfusion model
  171. miR-654-5p promotes gastric cancer progression via the GPRIN1/NF-κB pathway
  172. Identification of LIG1 and LIG3 as prognostic biomarkers in breast cancer
  173. MitoQ inhibits hepatic stellate cell activation and liver fibrosis by enhancing PINK1/parkin-mediated mitophagy
  174. Dissecting role of founder mutation p.V727M in GNE in Indian HIBM cohort
  175. circATP2A2 promotes osteosarcoma progression by upregulating MYH9
  176. Prognostic role of oxytocin receptor in colon adenocarcinoma
  177. Review Articles
  178. The function of non-coding RNAs in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
  179. Efficacy and safety of therapeutic plasma exchange in stiff person syndrome
  180. Role of cesarean section in the development of neonatal gut microbiota: A systematic review
  181. Small cell lung cancer transformation during antitumor therapies: A systematic review
  182. Research progress of gut microbiota and frailty syndrome
  183. Recommendations for outpatient activity in COVID-19 pandemic
  184. Rapid Communication
  185. Disparity in clinical characteristics between 2019 novel coronavirus pneumonia and leptospirosis
  186. Use of microspheres in embolization for unruptured renal angiomyolipomas
  187. COVID-19 cases with delayed absorption of lung lesion
  188. A triple combination of treatments on moderate COVID-19
  189. Social networks and eating disorders during the Covid-19 pandemic
  190. Letter
  191. COVID-19, WHO guidelines, pedagogy, and respite
  192. Inflammatory factors in alveolar lavage fluid from severe COVID-19 pneumonia: PCT and IL-6 in epithelial lining fluid
  193. COVID-19: Lessons from Norway tragedy must be considered in vaccine rollout planning in least developed/developing countries
  194. What is the role of plasma cell in the lamina propria of terminal ileum in Good’s syndrome patient?
  195. Case Report
  196. Rivaroxaban triggered multifocal intratumoral hemorrhage of the cabozantinib-treated diffuse brain metastases: A case report and review of literature
  197. CTU findings of duplex kidney in kidney: A rare duplicated renal malformation
  198. Synchronous primary malignancy of colon cancer and mantle cell lymphoma: A case report
  199. Sonazoid-enhanced ultrasonography and pathologic characters of CD68 positive cell in primary hepatic perivascular epithelioid cell tumors: A case report and literature review
  200. Persistent SARS-CoV-2-positive over 4 months in a COVID-19 patient with CHB
  201. Pulmonary parenchymal involvement caused by Tropheryma whipplei
  202. Mediastinal mixed germ cell tumor: A case report and literature review
  203. Ovarian female adnexal tumor of probable Wolffian origin – Case report
  204. Rare paratesticular aggressive angiomyxoma mimicking an epididymal tumor in an 82-year-old man: Case report
  205. Perimenopausal giant hydatidiform mole complicated with preeclampsia and hyperthyroidism: A case report and literature review
  206. Primary orbital ganglioneuroblastoma: A case report
  207. Primary aortic intimal sarcoma masquerading as intramural hematoma
  208. Sustained false-positive results for hepatitis A virus immunoglobulin M: A case report and literature review
  209. Peritoneal loose body presenting as a hepatic mass: A case report and review of the literature
  210. Chondroblastoma of mandibular condyle: Case report and literature review
  211. Trauma-induced complete pacemaker lead fracture 8 months prior to hospitalization: A case report
  212. Primary intradural extramedullary extraosseous Ewing’s sarcoma/peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor (PIEES/PNET) of the thoracolumbar spine: A case report and literature review
  213. Computer-assisted preoperative planning of reduction of and osteosynthesis of scapular fracture: A case report
  214. High quality of 58-month life in lung cancer patient with brain metastases sequentially treated with gefitinib and osimertinib
  215. Rapid response of locally advanced oral squamous cell carcinoma to apatinib: A case report
  216. Retrieval of intrarenal coiled and ruptured guidewire by retrograde intrarenal surgery: A case report and literature review
  217. Usage of intermingled skin allografts and autografts in a senior patient with major burn injury
  218. Retraction
  219. Retraction on “Dihydromyricetin attenuates inflammation through TLR4/NF-kappa B pathway”
  220. Special Issue Computational Intelligence Methodologies Meets Recurrent Cancers - Part I
  221. An artificial immune system with bootstrap sampling for the diagnosis of recurrent endometrial cancers
  222. Breast cancer recurrence prediction with ensemble methods and cost-sensitive learning
Heruntergeladen am 15.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/med-2021-0288/html
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