PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Neurological abnormalities in full-term asphyxiated newborns and salivary S100B testing: the "Cooperative Multitask against Brain Injury of Neonates" (CoMBINe) international study.

  • Diego Gazzolo,
  • Francesca Pluchinotta,
  • Moataza Bashir,
  • Hanna Aboulgar,
  • Hala Mufeed Said,
  • Iskander Iman,
  • Giorgio Ivani,
  • Alessandra Conio,
  • Lucia Gabriella Tina,
  • Francesco Nigro,
  • Giovanni Li Volti,
  • Fabio Galvano,
  • Fabrizio Michetti,
  • Romolo Di Iorio,
  • Emanuela Marinoni,
  • Luc J Zimmermann,
  • Antonio D W Gavilanes,
  • Hans J S Vles,
  • Maria Kornacka,
  • Darek Gruszfeld,
  • Rosanna Frulio,
  • Renata Sacchi,
  • Sabina Ciotti,
  • Francesco M Risso,
  • Andrea Sannia,
  • Pasquale Florio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0115194
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
p. e0115194

Abstract

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Perinatal asphyxia (PA) is a leading cause of mortality and morbidity in newborns: its prognosis depends both on the severity of the asphyxia and on the immediate resuscitation to restore oxygen supply and blood circulation. Therefore, we investigated whether measurement of S100B, a consolidated marker of brain injury, in salivary fluid of PA newborns may constitute a useful tool for the early detection of asphyxia-related brain injury.We conducted a cross-sectional study in 292 full-term newborns admitted to our NICUs, of whom 48 suffered PA and 244 healthy controls admitted at our NICUs. Saliva S100B levels measurement longitudinally after birth; routine laboratory variables, neurological patterns, cerebral ultrasound and, magnetic resonance imaging were performed. The primary end-point was the presence of neurological abnormalities at 12-months after birth.S100B salivary levels were significantly (P3.25 MoM S100B achieved a sensitivity of 100% (CI5-95%: 89.3%-100%) and a specificity of 100% (CI5-95%: 98.6%-100%) as a single marker for predicting the occurrence of abnormal neurological outcome (area under the ROC curve: 1.000; CI5-95%: 0.987-1.0).S100B protein measurement in saliva, soon after birth, is a useful tool to identify which asphyxiated infants are at risk of neurological sequelae.