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The translational importance of establishing biomarkers of human spinal cord injury
Authors:Sanam Salimi Elizei  Brian K.Kwon
Affiliation:1. International Collaboration on Repair Discoveries (ICORD),University of British Columbia,BC,Canada;2. International Collaboration on Repair Discoveries (ICORD),University of British Columbia,BC,Canada;Vancouver Spine Surgery Institute,Department of Orthopaedics,University of British Columbia,BC,Canada
Abstract:The evaluation of such novel therapies for acute spinal cord injury in clinical trials is extremely challenging. Our current dependence upon the clinical assessment of neurologic impairment renders many acute SCI patients ineligible for trials because they are not examinable. Furthermore, the difficulty in predicting neu-rologic recovery based on the early clinical assessment forces investigators to recruit large cohorts to have sufficient power. Biomarkers that objectively classify injury severity and better predict neurologic outcome would be valuable tools for translational research. As such, the objective of the present review was to de-scribe some of the translational challenges in acute spinal cord injury research and examine the potential utility of neurochemical biomarkers found within cerebrospinal fluid and blood. We focus on published efforts to establish biological markers for accurately classifying injury severity and precisely predict neuro-logical outcome.
Keywords:spinal cord injury  biomarkers  cerebrospinal fluid  injury severity  neurological recovery
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