Peripheral white blood cell responses as emerging biomarkers for patient stratification and prognosis in acute spinal cord injury.

2021 
PURPOSE OF REVIEW To date, prognostication of patients after acute traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) mostly relies on the neurological assessment of residual function attributed to lesion characteristics. With emerging treatment candidates awaiting to be tested in early clinical trials, there is a need for wholistic high-yield prognostic biomarkers that integrate both neurogenic and nonneurogenic SCI pathophysiology as well as premorbid patient characteristics. RECENT FINDINGS It is becoming clearer that effective prognostication after acute SCI would benefit from integrating an assessment of pathophysiological changes on a systemic level, and with that, extend from a lesion-centric approach. Immunological markers mirror tissue injury as well as host immune function and are easily accessible through routine blood sampling. New studies have highlighted the value of circulating white blood cells, neutrophils and lymphocytes in particular, as prognostic systemic indicators of SCI severity and outcomes. SUMMARY We survey recent advances in methods and approaches that may allow for a more refined diagnosis and better prognostication after acute SCI, discuss how these may help deepen our understanding of SCI pathophysiology, and be of use in clinical trials.
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