Circulating biomarkers of kidney angiomyolipoma and cysts in tuberous sclerosis complex patients
Authors
Varvara I Rubtsova ; Yujin Chun 2 ; Joohwan Kim 2 ; Cuauhtemoc B Ramirez 1 2 ; Sunhee Jung 1 ; Wonsuk Choi ; Miranda E Kelly ; Miranda L Lopez ; Elizabeth Cassidy ; Gabrielle Rushing ; Dean J Aguiar ; Wei Ling Lau ; Rebecca S Ahdoot ; Moyra Smith ; Aimee L Edinger ; Sang-Guk Lee ; Cholsoon Jang ; Gina Lee
Patients with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) develop multi-organ disease manifestations, with kidney angiomyolipomas (AML) and cysts being one of the most common and deadly. Early and regular AML/cyst detection and monitoring are vital to lower TSC patient morbidity and mortality. However, the current standard of care involves imaging-based methods that are not designed for rapid screening, posing challenges for early detection. To identify potential diagnostic screening biomarkers of AML/cysts, we performed global untargeted metabolomics in blood samples from 283 kidney AML/cyst-positive or -negative TSC patients using mass spectrometry. We identified 7 highly sensitive chemical features, including octanoic acid, that predict kidney AML/cysts in TSC patients. Patients with elevated octanoic acid have lower levels of very long-chain fatty acids (VLCFAs), suggesting that dysregulated peroxisome activity leads to overproduction of octanoic acid via VLCFA oxidation. These data highlight AML/cysts blood biomarkers for TSC patients and offers valuable metabolic insights into the disease.