Abstract

Introduction:We have previously shown that the concentrations of D-dimer are significantly elevated in saliva compared with plasma. Saliva offers several advantages compared with blood analysis. We hypothesised that human saliva contains plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) and that the concentrations are not affected by the time of saliva collection. The aim was to adopt and validate an immunoassay to quantify PAI-1 concentrations in saliva and to determine whether saliva collection time has an influence in the measurement.Materials and methods:Two saliva samples (morning and afternoon) from the same day were collected from healthy subjects (N = 40) who have had no underlying heart conditions. A customized AlphaLISA® immunoassay (PerkinElmer®, MA, USA) was adopted and used to quantify PAI-1 concentrations. We validated the analytical performance of the customized immunoassay by calculating recovery of known amount of analyte spiked in saliva.Results:The recovery (95.03%), intra- (8.59%) and inter-assay (7.52%) variations were within the acceptable ranges. The median salivary PAI-1 concentrations were 394 pg/mL (interquartile ranges (IQR) 243.4–833.1 pg/mL) in the morning and 376 (129.1–615.4) pg/mL in the afternoon and the plasma concentration was 59,000 (24,000–110,000) pg/mL. Salivary PAI-1 did not correlate with plasma (P = 0.812).Conclusions:The adopted immunoassay produced acceptable assay sensitivity and specificity. The data demonstrated that saliva contains PAI-1 and that its concentration is not affected by the time of saliva collection. There is no correlation between salivary and plasma PAI-1 concentrations. Further studies are required to demonstrate the utility of salivary PAI-1 in CVD risk factor studies.

Highlights

  • We have previously shown that the concentrations of D-dimer are significantly elevated in saliva compared with plasma

  • The data demonstrated that saliva contains plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) and that its concentration is not affected by the time of saliva collection

  • There is no correlation between salivary and plasma PAI-1 concentrations

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Summary

Introduction

We have previously shown that the concentrations of D-dimer are significantly elevated in saliva compared with plasma. Newer biomarkers, including plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) [4], brain type natriuretic peptide (BNP) [5], N-terminal prohormone of BNP (NT-proBNP) [6,7], C-reactive protein (CRP) [8], D-dimer [9,10], troponin I [11] and inflammatory mediators [12] have been associated with CVD risk. We have quantified D-dimer concentrations in human saliva and demonstrated a twofold increase in saliva compared with plasma collected from the same individuals [9]. These findings prompted us to further investigate other pro-

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