%0 Journal Article %A Lagerstedt, Linnéa %A Egea-Guerrero, Juan José %A Bustamante, Alejandro %A Montaner, Joan %A Rodríguez-Rodríguez, Ana %A El Rahal, Amir %A Turck, Natacha %A Quintana, Manuel %A García-Armengol, Roser %A Prica, Carmen Melinda %A Andereggen, Elisabeth %A Rinaldi, Lara %A Sarrafzadeh, Asita %A Schaller, Karl %A Sanchez, Jean-Charles %T H-FABP: A new biomarker to differentiate between CT-positive and CT-negative patients with mild traumatic brain injury. %D 2017 %U http://hdl.handle.net/10668/11105 %X The majority of patients with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) will have normal Glasgow coma scale (GCS) of 15. Furthermore, only 5%-8% of them will be CT-positive for an mTBI. Having a useful biomarker would help clinicians evaluate a patient's risk of developing intracranial lesions. The S100B protein is currently the most studied and promising biomarker for this purpose. Heart fatty-acid binding protein (H-FABP) has been highlighted in brain injury models and investigated as a biomarker for stroke and severe TBI, for example. Here, we evaluate the performances of S100B and H-FABP for differentiating between CT-positive and CT-negative patients. A total of 261 patients with a GCS score of 15 and at least one clinical symptom of mTBI were recruited at three different European sites. Blood samples from 172 of them were collected ≤ 6 h after trauma. Patients underwent a CT scan and were dichotomised into CT-positive and CT-negative groups for statistical analyses. H-FABP and S100B levels were measured using commercial kits, and their capacities to detect all CT-positive scans were evaluated, with sensitivity set to 100%. For patients recruited ≤ 6 h after trauma, the CT-positive group demonstrated significantly higher levels of both H-FABP (p = 0.004) and S100B (p = 0.003) than the CT-negative group. At 100% sensitivity, specificity reached 6% (95% CI 2.8-10.7) for S100B and 29% (95% CI 21.4-37.1) for H-FABP. Similar results were obtained when including all the patients recruited, i.e. hospital arrival within 24 h of trauma onset. H-FABP out-performed S100B and thus seems to be an interesting protein for detecting all CT-positive mTBI patients with a GCS score of 15 and at least one clinical symptom. %~