Clinical significance of a novel inflammatory-nutritional index in glaucoma severity evaluation

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Titel: Clinical significance of a novel inflammatory-nutritional index in glaucoma severity evaluation
Autoren: Xiao Xiao, Yanping Gao, Gao Zhang, Zuo Wang, An Li, Donghua Liu, Jing Fu, Wenbo Xiu, Chang Lu, Jinxia Wang, Xiong Zhu, Yang Chen, Lingling Chen, Bolin Deng, Ping Shuai, Chong He, Fang Lu
Quelle: Biomolecules & Biomedicine (2025)
Verlagsinformationen: Association of Basic Medical Sciences of FBIH, 2025.
Publikationsjahr: 2025
Schlagwörter: systemic inflammation, QH301-705.5, lymphocyte rate, biomarker, Glaucoma, Alb, Biology (General), albumin
Beschreibung: This study investigated the association between glaucoma and serum albumin (Alb), lymphocyte percentage (LYMPH%), and their combined index (LAP = LYMPH% × Alb), to evaluate their potential as biomarkers for systemic inflammation and disease progression in glaucoma. We enrolled 161 glaucoma patients and 181 healthy controls. Serum Alb and LYMPH% were measured using standard blood biochemistry and routine tests, and LAP was calculated accordingly. Statistical analyses were performed to compare these markers between groups and assess their correlation with disease severity. Both the median serum Alb level and peripheral blood LYMPH% were significantly lower in the glaucoma group compared to controls (Alb: 43.48 g/L vs 44.63 g/L, P < 0.001; LYMPH%: 24.25% vs 29.12%, P < 0.001). Correspondingly, LAP levels were also significantly reduced in glaucoma patients (1053 vs 1298, P < 0.001). Lower LYMPH% and LAP levels were associated with more severe glaucomatous visual impairment (LAP, healthy controls vs glaucoma: AUC = 0.7080, P < 0.001, Max Youden = 0.3621; early vs severe glaucoma: AUC = 0.8061, P < 0.001, Max Youden = 0.5377). In summary, LAP may serve as a supportive biomarker of systemic inflammation in glaucoma. It demonstrates good accuracy in reflecting glaucoma severity and shows potential for monitoring disease progression.
Publikationsart: Article
ISSN: 2831-090X
2831-0896
DOI: 10.17305/bb.2025.12374
Zugangs-URL: https://doaj.org/article/af9e2c50edfb43caaea978da58f615fd
Rights: CC BY
Dokumentencode: edsair.doi.dedup.....e47d07581a33a27729d1dd79fa72c75e
Datenbank: OpenAIRE
Beschreibung
Abstract:This study investigated the association between glaucoma and serum albumin (Alb), lymphocyte percentage (LYMPH%), and their combined index (LAP = LYMPH% × Alb), to evaluate their potential as biomarkers for systemic inflammation and disease progression in glaucoma. We enrolled 161 glaucoma patients and 181 healthy controls. Serum Alb and LYMPH% were measured using standard blood biochemistry and routine tests, and LAP was calculated accordingly. Statistical analyses were performed to compare these markers between groups and assess their correlation with disease severity. Both the median serum Alb level and peripheral blood LYMPH% were significantly lower in the glaucoma group compared to controls (Alb: 43.48 g/L vs 44.63 g/L, P < 0.001; LYMPH%: 24.25% vs 29.12%, P < 0.001). Correspondingly, LAP levels were also significantly reduced in glaucoma patients (1053 vs 1298, P < 0.001). Lower LYMPH% and LAP levels were associated with more severe glaucomatous visual impairment (LAP, healthy controls vs glaucoma: AUC = 0.7080, P < 0.001, Max Youden = 0.3621; early vs severe glaucoma: AUC = 0.8061, P < 0.001, Max Youden = 0.5377). In summary, LAP may serve as a supportive biomarker of systemic inflammation in glaucoma. It demonstrates good accuracy in reflecting glaucoma severity and shows potential for monitoring disease progression.
ISSN:2831090X
28310896
DOI:10.17305/bb.2025.12374