No evidence of association between either Modic change or disc degeneration and five circulating inflammatory proteins

Introduction Intervertebral disc degeneration and Modic change are the main spinal structural changes associated with chronic low back pain (LBP). Both conditions are thought to manifest local inflammation and if inflammatory proteins translocate to the blood circulation could be detected systemical...

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Published inJOR-spine Vol. 7; no. 1; pp. e1323 - n/a
Main Authors Compte, Roger, Freidin, Maxim B., Granville Smith, Isabelle, Le Maitre, Christine L., Vaitkute, Dovile, Nessa, Ayrun, Lachance, Genevieve, Williams, Frances M. K.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken, USA John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.03.2024
Wiley
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Summary:Introduction Intervertebral disc degeneration and Modic change are the main spinal structural changes associated with chronic low back pain (LBP). Both conditions are thought to manifest local inflammation and if inflammatory proteins translocate to the blood circulation could be detected systemically. The work here assesses whether the presence of disc degeneration is associated with detectable blood level changes of five inflammatory markers and whether chronic LBP is associated with these changes. Materials and Methods Two hundred and forty TwinsUK cohort participants with both MRI disc degeneration grade and Modic change extent, and IL‐6, IL‐8, IL‐8 TNF, and CX3CL1 protein blood concentration measurements were included in this work. Linear mixed effects models were used to test the association of blood cytokine concentration with disc degeneration score and Modic change volumetric score. Association of chronic LBP status from questionnaires with disc degeneration, Modic change, and cytokine blood concentration was also tested. Results No statistically significant association between disc degeneration or Modic change with cytokine blood concentration was found. Instead, regression analysis pointed strong association between cytokine blood concentration with body mass index for IL‐6 and with age for IL‐6 and TNF. Mild association was found between IL‐8 blood concentration and body mass index. Additionally, LBP status was associated with Modic change volumetric score but not associated with any cytokine concentration. Conclusions We found no evidence that Modic change and disc degeneration are able to produce changes in tested blood cytokine concentration. However, age and body mass index have strong influence on cytokine concentration and both are associated with the conditions studied which may confound associations found in the literature. It is then unlikely that cytokines produced in the disc or vertebral bone marrow induce chronic LBP. This study investigates the potential link between intervertebral disc degeneration, Modic changes, and low back pain (LBP) by analyzing systemic levels of inflammatory proteins. Utilizing twin data from the TwinsUK cohort, the research concludes that there is no evidence indicating an association between these structural changes and alterations in blood inflammatory proteins. Additionally, the study explores the correlation between blood protein levels and LBP, revealing no discernible association. These findings contribute valuable insights into the intricate relationship between structural changes, inflammatory processes, and the experience of LBP.
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ISSN:2572-1143
2572-1143
DOI:10.1002/jsp2.1323