Scientific Reports (Mar 2021)

A Japanese prospective multicenter study of urinary oxysterols in biliary atresia

  • Ken-ichiro Konishi,
  • Tatsuki Mizuochi,
  • Hajime Takei,
  • Ryosuke Yasuda,
  • Hirotaka Sakaguchi,
  • Jun Ishihara,
  • Yugo Takaki,
  • Masahiro Kinoshita,
  • Naoki Hashizume,
  • Suguru Fukahori,
  • Hiromichi Shoji,
  • Go Miyano,
  • Koichiro Yoshimaru,
  • Toshiharu Matsuura,
  • Yukihiro Sanada,
  • Takahisa Tainaka,
  • Hiroo Uchida,
  • Yumiko Kubo,
  • Hiromu Tanaka,
  • Hideyuki Sasaki,
  • Tsuyoshi Murai,
  • Jun Fujishiro,
  • Yushiro Yamashita,
  • Masaki Nio,
  • Hiroshi Nittono,
  • Akihiko Kimura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-84445-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Diagnosis of biliary atresia (BA) can involve uncertainties. In the present prospective multicenter study, we considered whether urinary oxysterols represent a useful marker for diagnosis of BA in Japanese children. Subjects under 6 months old at 7 pediatric centers in Japan were prospectively enrolled, including patients with cholestasis and healthy controls (HC) without liver disease. Patients with cholestasis constituted 2 groups representing BA patients and others with cholestasis from other causes (non-BA). We quantitatively analyzed 7 oxysterols including 4β-, 20(S)-, 22(S)-, 22(R)-, 24(S)-, 25-, and 27-hydroxycholesterol by liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectrometry. Enrolled subjects included 14 with BA (median age 68 days; range 26–170) and 10 non-BA cholestatic controls (59; 14–162), as well as 10 HC (57; 25–120). Total urinary oxysterols were significantly greater in BA (median, 153.0 μmol/mol creatinine; range 24.1–486.7; P < 0.001) and non-BA (36.2; 5.8–411.3; P < 0.05) than in HC (2.7; 0.8–7.6). In patients with BA, urinary 27-hydroxycholesterol (3.61; 0.42–11.09; P < 0.01) was significantly greater than in non-BA (0.71; 0–5.62). In receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis for distinguishing BA from non-BA, the area under the ROC curve for urinary 27-hydroxycholesterol was 0.83. In conclusion, this first report of urinary oxysterol analysis in patients with BA indicated that 27-hydroxycholesterol may be a useful marker for distinguishing BA from other causes of neonatal cholestasis.