Abstract

AimSalivary cortisol, α-amylase (sAA), secretory IgA (sIgA), testosterone, and soluble fraction of receptor II of TNFα (sTNFαRII) could serve as objective pain measures, but the normal variability of these potential biomarkers is unknown.Patients & MethodsSaliva was collected with the passive secretion method from 34, pain-free subjects in two single samples at least 24 hours apart. Biomarker variation and intersession reliability were assessed with the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Also, we calculated the within-subject standard deviation (Sw) and the reproducibility (2.77 × Sw) of intersession measures.ResultsSalivary cortisol, sAA, sIgA, testosterone, and sTNFαRII yielded the following ICCs: 0.53, 0.003, 0.88, 0.42 and 0.83, respectively. We found no statistically significant systematic differences between sessions in any biomarker except for testosterone, which showed a decrease on the second day (p<0.001). The reproducibility for salivary cortisol, sAA, sIgA, testosterone, and sTNFαRII were 0.46 ng/ml, 12.88 U/ml, 11.7 μg/ml, 14.54 pg/ml and 18.29 pg/ml, respectively. Cortisol, testosterone and TNFαRII measurement variability showed a positive correlation with the magnitude (p<0.002), but no relationship was found for sAA and sIgA.ConclusionsSalivary sIgA and sTNFαRII show a remarkable good reproducibility and, therefore, could be useful as pain biomarkers. When using the passive secretion method, intersession variations in salivary sIgA of more than 11.7 μg/ml may reflect true biomarker change. In the case of sTNFαRII this will depend of the magnitude. The estimates herein provided should help investigators and clinicians differentiate actual biomarker modification from measurement variability.

Highlights

  • Objective measurement of pain is still a challenge, especially for acute post-operative and chronic pain

  • We found no statistically significant systematic differences between sessions in any biomarker except for testosterone, which showed a decrease on the second day (p

  • Testosterone and TNFαRII measurement variability showed a positive correlation with the magnitude (p

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Summary

Introduction

Objective measurement of pain is still a challenge, especially for acute post-operative and chronic pain. Subjective methods based on visual analogue scales are used in clinics to measure pain and to evaluate the usefulness of the proposed treatments [1,2]. Despite the acceptance of these scales for research purposes [1,3,4,5], there is still a need to find and define more objective measurements of pain. Some biomarkers of pain in saliva have been described [6,7], but until now none has been widely accepted. There are no studies that analyze putative salivary pain biomarkers in the same pain-free subject to establish the reproducibility of the measurements over time

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