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Investigation of the Changes in Concentrations of Vitamin D-Binding Protein and Lactoferin in Plasma and Peritoneal Fluid of Patients with Endometriosis.

Barbara Lisowska-MyjakEwa SkarżyńskaMonika WróbelGrzegorz MańkaMariusz KieckaMichał LipaDamian WarzechaRobert Z SpaczynskiPiotr PiekarskiBeata BanaszewskaArtur Jacek JakimiukTadeusz IssatWojciech RokitaMlodawski JakubMaria SzubertPiotr SieroszewskiGrzegorz RabaKamil SzczupakTomasz KluzMarek KluzaMiroslaw WielgosPiotr Laudański
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2023)
An evaluation of the association between the concentrations of vitamin D-binding protein and lactoferrin in the plasma and peritoneal fluid may facilitate the elucidation of molecular mechanisms in endometriosis. Vitamin D-binding protein and lactoferrin concentrations were measured by ELISA in plasma and peritoneal fluid samples from 95 women with suspected endometriosis as classified by laparoscopy into groups with (n = 59) and without endometriosis (n = 36). There were no differences ( p > 0.05) in the plasma and peritoneal fluid concentrations of vitamin D-binding protein and lactoferrin between women with and without endometriosis. In women with endometriosis, there was a significant correlation between plasma and peritoneal fluid vitamin D-binding protein concentrations (r = 0.821; p = 0.000), but there was no correlation between lactoferrin concentrations in those compartments (r = 0.049; p > 0.05). Furthermore, in endometriosis, lactoferrin was found to correlate poorly with vitamin D-binding protein (r= -0.236; p > 0.05) in plasma, while in the peritoneal fluid, the correlation between those proteins was significant (r = 0.399; p = 0.002). The characteristic properties of vitamin D-binding protein and lactoferrin and the associations between their plasma and peritoneal fluid concentrations found in women with endometriosis may provide a novel panel of markers to identify high-risk patients in need of further diagnostic measures.
Keyphrases
  • binding protein
  • end stage renal disease
  • chronic kidney disease
  • ejection fraction
  • peritoneal dialysis