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1.
Crit Care ; 28(1): 132, 2024 04 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38649920

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Rapidly improving acute respiratory distress syndrome (RIARDS) is an increasingly appreciated subgroup of ARDS in which hypoxemia improves within 24 h after initiation of mechanical ventilation. Detailed clinical and biological features of RIARDS have not been clearly defined, and it is unknown whether RIARDS is associated with the hypoinflammatory or hyperinflammatory phenotype of ARDS. The purpose of this study was to define the clinical and biological features of RIARDS and its association with inflammatory subphenotypes. METHODS: We analyzed data from 215 patients who met Berlin criteria for ARDS (endotracheally intubated) and were enrolled in a prospective observational cohort conducted at two sites, one tertiary care center and one urban safety net hospital. RIARDS was defined according to previous studies as improvement of hypoxemia defined as (i) PaO2:FiO2 > 300 or (ii) SpO2: FiO2 > 315 on the day following diagnosis of ARDS (day 2) or (iii) unassisted breathing by day 2 and for the next 48 h (defined as absence of endotracheal intubation on day 2 through day 4). Plasma biomarkers were measured on samples collected on the day of study enrollment, and ARDS phenotypes were allocated as previously described. RESULTS: RIARDS accounted for 21% of all ARDS participants. Patients with RIARDS had better clinical outcomes compared to those with persistent ARDS, with lower hospital mortality (13% vs. 57%; p value < 0.001) and more ICU-free days (median 24 vs. 0; p value < 0.001). Plasma levels of interleukin-6, interleukin-8, and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 were significantly lower among patients with RIARDS. The hypoinflammatory phenotype of ARDS was more common among patients with RIARDS (78% vs. 51% in persistent ARDS; p value = 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: This study identifies a high prevalence of RIARDS in a multicenter observational cohort and confirms the more benign clinical course of these patients. We report the novel finding that RIARDS is characterized by lower concentrations of plasma biomarkers of inflammation compared to persistent ARDS, and that hypoinflammatory ARDS is more prevalent among patients with RIARDS. Identification and exclusion of RIARDS could potentially improve prognostic and predictive enrichment in clinical trials.


Assuntos
Biomarcadores , Respiração Artificial , Síndrome do Desconforto Respiratório , Humanos , Síndrome do Desconforto Respiratório/terapia , Síndrome do Desconforto Respiratório/sangue , Síndrome do Desconforto Respiratório/fisiopatologia , Masculino , Feminino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Estudos Prospectivos , Idoso , Biomarcadores/sangue , Biomarcadores/análise , Respiração Artificial/métodos , Respiração Artificial/estatística & dados numéricos , Adulto , Estudos de Coortes , Hipóxia/sangue
2.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med ; 209(7): 805-815, 2024 Apr 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38190719

RESUMO

Rationale: Two molecular phenotypes of sepsis and acute respiratory distress syndrome, termed hyperinflammatory and hypoinflammatory, have been consistently identified by latent class analysis in numerous cohorts, with widely divergent clinical outcomes and differential responses to some treatments; however, the key biological differences between these phenotypes remain poorly understood.Objectives: We used host and microbe metagenomic sequencing data from blood to deepen our understanding of biological differences between latent class analysis-derived phenotypes and to assess concordance between the latent class analysis-derived phenotypes and phenotypes reported by other investigative groups (e.g., Sepsis Response Signature [SRS1-2], molecular diagnosis and risk stratification of sepsis [MARS1-4], reactive and uninflamed).Methods: We analyzed data from 113 patients with hypoinflammatory sepsis and 76 patients with hyperinflammatory sepsis enrolled in a two-hospital prospective cohort study. Molecular phenotypes had been previously assigned using latent class analysis.Measurements and Main Results: The hyperinflammatory and hypoinflammatory phenotypes of sepsis had distinct gene expression signatures, with 5,755 genes (31%) differentially expressed. The hyperinflammatory phenotype was associated with elevated expression of innate immune response genes, whereas the hypoinflammatory phenotype was associated with elevated expression of adaptive immune response genes and, notably, T cell response genes. Plasma metagenomic analysis identified differences in prevalence of bacteremia, bacterial DNA abundance, and composition between the phenotypes, with an increased presence and abundance of Enterobacteriaceae in the hyperinflammatory phenotype. Significant overlap was observed between these phenotypes and previously identified transcriptional subtypes of acute respiratory distress syndrome (reactive and uninflamed) and sepsis (SRS1-2). Analysis of data from the VANISH trial indicated that corticosteroids might have a detrimental effect in patients with the hypoinflammatory phenotype.Conclusions: The hyperinflammatory and hypoinflammatory phenotypes have distinct transcriptional and metagenomic features that could be leveraged for precision treatment strategies.


Assuntos
Síndrome do Desconforto Respiratório , Sepse , Humanos , Estudos Prospectivos , Estado Terminal , Fenótipo , Sepse/genética , Sepse/complicações , Síndrome do Desconforto Respiratório/complicações
3.
4.
Crit Care Explor ; 5(10): e0986, 2023 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37811130

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the study design and feasibility of drug administration and safety in a randomized clinical trial of recombinant human annexin A5 (SY-005), a constitutively expressed protein with anti-inflammatory, antiapoptotic, and anticoagulant properties, in patients with severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). DESIGN: Double-blind, randomized clinical trial. SETTING: Two ICUs at an academic medical center. PATIENTS/SUBJECTS: Adults admitted to the ICU with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 and requiring ventilatory or vasopressor support. INTERVENTIONS: SY-005, a recombinant human annexin A5, at 50 or 100 µg/kg IV every 12 hours for 7 days. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: We enrolled 18 of the 55 eligible patients (33%) between April 21, 2021, and February 3, 2022. We administered 82% (196/238) of the anticipated doses of study medication and 86% (169/196) were given within 1 hour of the scheduled time. There were no drug-related serious adverse events. We captured 100% of the data that would be required for measuring clinical outcomes in a phase 2 or 3 trial. LIMITATIONS: The small sample size was a result of decreasing admissions of patients with COVID-19, which triggered a stopping rule for the trial. CONCLUSIONS: Although enrollment was low, administration of SY-005 to critically ill patients with COVID-19 every 12 hours for up to 7 days was feasible and safe. Further clinical trials of annexin A5 for the treatment of COVID-19 are warranted. Given reduction of severe COVID-19 disease, future studies should explore the safety and effectiveness of SY-005 use in non-COVID-related sepsis.

5.
BMC Infect Dis ; 23(1): 630, 2023 Sep 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37752433

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: A prospective observational cohort study of COVID-19 patients in a single Emergency Department (ED) showed that sTREM-1- and IL-6-based algorithms were highly predictive of adverse outcome (Van Singer et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2021). We aim to validate the performance of these algorithms at ED presentation. METHODS: This multicentric prospective observational study of PCR-confirmed COVID-19 adult patients was conducted in the ED of three Swiss hospitals. Data of the three centers were retrospectively completed and merged. We determined the predictive accuracy of the sTREM-1-based algorithm for 30-day intubation/mortality. We also determined the performance of the IL-6-based algorithm using data from one center for 30-day oxygen requirement. RESULTS: 373 patients were included in the validation cohort, 139 (37%) in Lausanne, 93 (25%) in St.Gallen and 141 (38%) in EOC. Overall, 18% (93/373) patients died or were intubated by day 30. In Lausanne, 66% (92/139) patients required oxygen by day 30. The predictive accuracy of sTREM-1 and IL-6 were similar compared to the derivation cohort. The sTREM-1-based algorithm confirmed excellent sensitivity (90% versus 100% in the derivation cohort) and negative predictive value (94% versus 100%) for 30-day intubation/mortality. The IL-6-based algorithm performance was acceptable with a sensitivity of 85% versus 98% in the derivation cohort and a negative predictive value of 60% versus 92%. CONCLUSION: The sTREM-1 algorithm demonstrated good reproducibility. A prospective randomized controlled trial, comparing outcomes with and without the algorithm, is necessary to assess its safety and impact on hospital and ICU admission rates. The IL-6 algorithm showed acceptable validity in a single center and need additional validation before widespread implementation.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , Adulto , Humanos , Algoritmos , COVID-19/diagnóstico , Interleucina-6 , Estudos Prospectivos , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Estudos Retrospectivos
6.
Lancet Respir Med ; 11(11): 965-974, 2023 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37633303

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: In sepsis and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), heterogeneity has contributed to difficulty identifying effective pharmacotherapies. In ARDS, two molecular phenotypes (hypoinflammatory and hyperinflammatory) have consistently been identified, with divergent outcomes and treatment responses. In this study, we sought to derive molecular phenotypes in critically ill adults with sepsis, determine their overlap with previous ARDS phenotypes, and evaluate whether they respond differently to treatment in completed sepsis trials. METHODS: We used clinical data and plasma biomarkers from two prospective sepsis cohorts, the Validating Acute Lung Injury biomarkers for Diagnosis (VALID) study (N=1140) and the Early Assessment of Renal and Lung Injury (EARLI) study (N=818), in latent class analysis (LCA) to identify the optimal number of classes in each cohort independently. We used validated models trained to classify ARDS phenotypes to evaluate concordance of sepsis and ARDS phenotypes. We applied these models retrospectively to the previously published Prospective Recombinant Human Activated Protein C Worldwide Evaluation in Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock (PROWESS-SHOCK) trial and Vasopressin and Septic Shock Trial (VASST) to assign phenotypes and evaluate heterogeneity of treatment effect. FINDINGS: A two-class model best fit both VALID and EARLI (p<0·0001). In VALID, 804 (70·5%) of the 1140 patients were classified as hypoinflammatory and 336 (29·5%) as hyperinflammatory; in EARLI, 530 (64·8%) of 818 were hypoinflammatory and 288 (35·2%) hyperinflammatory. We observed higher plasma pro-inflammatory cytokines, more vasopressor use, more bacteraemia, lower protein C, and higher mortality in the hyperinflammatory than in the hypoinflammatory phenotype (p<0·0001 for all). Classifier models indicated strong concordance between sepsis phenotypes and previously identified ARDS phenotypes (area under the curve 0·87-0·96, depending on the model). Findings were similar excluding participants with both sepsis and ARDS. In PROWESS-SHOCK, 1142 (68·0%) of 1680 patients had the hypoinflammatory phenotype and 538 (32·0%) had the hyperinflammatory phenotype, and response to activated protein C differed by phenotype (p=0·0043). In VASST, phenotype proportions were similar to other cohorts; however, no treatment interaction with the type of vasopressor was observed (p=0·72). INTERPRETATION: Molecular phenotypes previously identified in ARDS are also identifiable in multiple sepsis cohorts and respond differently to activated protein C. Molecular phenotypes could represent a treatable trait in critical illness beyond the patient's syndromic diagnosis. FUNDING: US National Institutes of Health.


Assuntos
Síndrome do Desconforto Respiratório , Sepse , Choque Séptico , Adulto , Humanos , Choque Séptico/diagnóstico , Choque Séptico/tratamento farmacológico , Proteína C/uso terapêutico , Estudos Retrospectivos , Estudos Prospectivos , Sepse/diagnóstico , Sepse/tratamento farmacológico , Sepse/complicações , Fenótipo , Biomarcadores , Vasoconstritores/uso terapêutico , Ensaios Clínicos Controlados Aleatórios como Assunto
7.
EBioMedicine ; 94: 104721, 2023 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37467665

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Children in Africa carry a disproportionate burden of malnutrition and infectious disease. Together, malnutrition and infection are major contributors to global child mortality; however, their collective impact on immune activation are not well described. METHODS: This was a secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study of children hospitalized with acute febrile illness at a single centre in Uganda. We investigated the association between malnutrition (determined using the mid-upper arm circumference, MUAC), immune activation (as measured by inflammatory markers IL-6, IL-8, CXCL10, CHI3L1, sTNFR1, Cystatin C, granzyme B, and sTREM-1), and mortality. FINDINGS: Of the 1850 children eligible for this secondary analysis, 71 (3.8%) and 145 (11.7%) presented with severe acute malnutrition (SAM, MUAC <115 mm) and moderate malnutrition (MUAC 115 to < 125 mm), respectively. SAM was associated with increased concentrations of CHI3L1, sTNFR1, Cystatin C, and sTREM-1, and decreased concentrations of CXCL10 and granzyme B, even after controlling for age, sex, and disease severity at presentation. There were 77 deaths (4.2%). SAM was associated with a 9.2-fold (95% CI 4.8-46), 17-fold (95% CI 3.9-74), and 13-fold (95% CI 3.5-52) increased odds of death in children with pneumonia, malaria, and diarrheal illness, respectively. Mediation analysis implicated sTREM-1 and CHI3L1 in the effect of SAM on mortality, suggesting that enhanced activation of these inflammatory pathways is associated with the increased mortality in undernourished children with pneumonia and malaria. INTERPRETATION: Collectively, these data highlight systemic inflammation as a common pathway associated with malnutrition and infection that could be targeted to mitigate the burden of acute febrile illness in LMICs. FUNDING: This work was supported in part by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, and by kind donations from The Tesari Foundation and Kim Kertland. The funders had no role in design, analysis, or reporting of these studies.


Assuntos
Cistatina C , Desnutrição , Humanos , Criança , Lactente , Uganda/epidemiologia , Granzimas , Estudos Prospectivos , Antropometria , Canadá , Desnutrição/complicações , Desnutrição/epidemiologia , Hospitais
8.
Crit Care ; 27(1): 234, 2023 06 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37312169

RESUMO

Angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2) is associated with vascular endothelial injury and permeability in the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and sepsis. Elevated circulating Ang-2 levels may identify critically ill patients with distinct pathobiology amenable to targeted therapy. We hypothesized that plasma Ang-2 measured shortly after hospitalization among patients with sepsis would be associated with the development of ARDS and poor clinical outcomes. To test this hypothesis, we measured plasma Ang-2 in a cohort of 757 patients with sepsis, including 267 with ARDS, enrolled in the emergency department or early in their ICU course before the COVID-19 pandemic. Multivariable models were used to test the association of Ang-2 with the development of ARDS and 30-day morality. We found that early plasma Ang-2 in sepsis was associated with higher baseline severity of illness, the development of ARDS, and mortality risk. The association between Ang-2 and mortality was strongest among patients with ARDS and sepsis as compared to those with sepsis alone (OR 1.81 vs. 1.52 per log Ang-2 increase). These findings might inform models testing patient risk prediction and strengthen the evidence for Ang-2 as an appealing biomarker for patient selection for novel therapeutic agents to target vascular injury in sepsis and ARDS.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , Síndrome do Desconforto Respiratório , Sepse , Humanos , Angiopoietina-2 , Estado Terminal , Pandemias , Prognóstico
9.
Curr Opin Lipidol ; 34(2): 70-81, 2023 04 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36861948

RESUMO

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Sepsis is the extreme response to infection associated with high mortality, yet reliable biomarkers for its identification and stratification are lacking. RECENT FINDINGS: Our scoping review of studies published from January 2017 to September 2022 that investigated circulating protein and lipid markers to inform non-COVID-19 sepsis diagnosis and prognosis identified interleukin (IL)-6, IL-8, heparin-binding protein (HBP), and angiopoietin-2 as having the most evidence. Biomarkers can be grouped according to sepsis pathobiology to inform biological data interpretation and four such physiologic processes include: immune regulation, endothelial injury and coagulopathy, cellular injury, and organ injury. Relative to proteins, the pleiotropic effects of lipid species' render their categorization more difficult. Circulating lipids are relatively less well studied in sepsis, however, low high-density lipoprotein (HDL) is associated with poor outcome. SUMMARY: There is a lack of robust, large, and multicenter studies to support the routine use of circulating proteins and lipids for sepsis diagnosis or prognosis. Future studies will benefit from standardizing cohort design as well as analytical and reporting strategies. Incorporating biomarker dynamic changes and clinical data in statistical modeling may improve specificity for sepsis diagnosis and prognosis. To guide future clinical decisions at the bedside, point-of-care circulating biomarker quantification is needed.


Assuntos
Sepse , Humanos , Sepse/diagnóstico , Lipoproteínas HDL , Lipoproteínas LDL
10.
Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol ; 324(3): L297-L306, 2023 03 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36648136

RESUMO

Using latent class analysis (LCA) of clinical and protein biomarkers, researchers have identified two phenotypes of the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) with divergent clinical trajectories and treatment responses. We investigated whether plasma metabolites differed among patients with LCA-derived hyperinflammatory and hypoinflammatory ARDS, and we tested the prognostic utility of adding metabolic clusters to LCA phenotypes. We analyzed data from 93 patients with ARDS and sepsis enrolled in a multicenter prospective cohort of critically ill patients, comparing 970 metabolites between the two LCA-derived phenotypes. In all, 188 metabolites were differentially abundant between the two LCA-derived phenotypes. After adjusting for age, sex, confounding medications, and comorbid liver and kidney disease, 82 metabolites remained significantly different. Patients with hyperinflammatory ARDS had reduced circulating lipids but high levels of pyruvate, lactate, and malate. Metabolic cluster and LCA-derived phenotypes were each significantly and independently associated with survival. Patients with hyperinflammatory ARDS may be experiencing a glycolytic shift leading to dysregulated lipid metabolism. Metabolic profiling offers prognostic information beyond what is captured by LCA phenotypes alone. Deeper biological profiling may identify key differences in pathogenesis among patients with ARDS and may lead to novel targeted therapies.


Assuntos
Metabolismo dos Lipídeos , Síndrome do Desconforto Respiratório , Humanos , Estudos Prospectivos , Biomarcadores , Fenótipo , Síndrome do Desconforto Respiratório/terapia
11.
Front Pharmacol ; 14: 1299613, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38269269

RESUMO

Objective: Annexin A5 is a phosphatidylserine binding protein with anti-inflammatory, anticoagulant and anti-apoptotic properties. Preclinical studies have shown that annexin A5 inhibits pro-inflammatory responses and improves organ function and survival in rodent models of sepsis. This clinical trial aimed to evaluate the pharmacokinetic (PK) properties of the recombinant human annexin A5 (SY-005) in severe COVID-19. Methods: This was a pilot randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Severe COVID-19 patients were randomly assigned to receive intravenous 50 µg/kg (low dose, n = 3), 100 µg/kg (high dose, n = 5) of SY-005 or placebo (n = 5) every 12 h for 7 days. Plasma SY-005 levels were assessed using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and the PK parameters were determined using non-compartmental analysis. Results: All patients treated with SY-005 had a normal baseline estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR, 104-125 mL/min/1.73 m2). Both low and high doses of SY-005 were cleared within 6 h after intravenous administration. Plasma maximum concentrations (Cmax), half-life, clearance and volume distribution of low and high doses of SY-005 were 402.4 and 848.9 ng/mL, 0.92 and 0.96 h, 7.52 and 15.19 L/h, and 9.98 and 20.79 L, respectively. Daily pre-dose circulating annexin A5 levels were not significantly different when SY-005 was administered at the low or the high dose 12-h intervals. There was no significant effect on activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) or INR (international normalized ratio of prothrombin time) during 7 days of SY-005 treatment. Conclusion: SY-005 doses of 50 and 100 µg/kg were detectable and subsequently cleared from the plasma in severe COVID-19 patients with normal baseline renal function. There was no significant plasma SY-005 accumulation 6 h after drug administration and coagulation was not altered during 7 days of treatment. Clinical trials Registration: This study was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04748757, first posted on 10 February 2021).

12.
EBioMedicine ; 86: 104387, 2022 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36470831

RESUMO

Infection initiates sepsis, but the clinical disease arises through the innate immune response of the host. A rapidly evolving understanding of the biology of that response has not been paralleled by the development of successful new treatment. The COVID-19 pandemic has begun to change this revealing the promise of distinct therapeutic approaches and the feasibility of new approaches to evaluate them. We review the history of mediator-targeted therapy for sepsis and explore the conceptual, biological, technological, and organizational challenges that must be addressed to enable the development of effective treatments for a leading cause of global morbidity and mortality.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , Sepse , Humanos , Pesquisa Translacional Biomédica , Pandemias , COVID-19/complicações , Sepse/diagnóstico , Sepse/terapia , Sepse/etiologia , Imunidade Inata
13.
Nat Microbiol ; 7(11): 1805-1816, 2022 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36266337

RESUMO

We carried out integrated host and pathogen metagenomic RNA and DNA next generation sequencing (mNGS) of whole blood (n = 221) and plasma (n = 138) from critically ill patients following hospital admission. We assigned patients into sepsis groups on the basis of clinical and microbiological criteria. From whole-blood gene expression data, we distinguished patients with sepsis from patients with non-infectious systemic inflammatory conditions using a trained bagged support vector machine (bSVM) classifier (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) = 0.81 in the training set; AUC = 0.82 in a held-out validation set). Plasma RNA also yielded a transcriptional signature of sepsis with several genes previously reported as sepsis biomarkers, and a bSVM sepsis diagnostic classifier (AUC = 0.97 training set; AUC = 0.77 validation set). Pathogen detection performance of plasma mNGS varied on the basis of pathogen and site of infection. To improve detection of virus, we developed a secondary transcriptomic classifier (AUC = 0.94 training set; AUC = 0.96 validation set). We combined host and microbial features to develop an integrated sepsis diagnostic model that identified 99% of microbiologically confirmed sepsis cases, and predicted sepsis in 74% of suspected and 89% of indeterminate sepsis cases. In summary, we suggest that integrating host transcriptional profiling and broad-range metagenomic pathogen detection from nucleic acid is a promising tool for sepsis diagnosis.


Assuntos
Estado Terminal , Sepse , Adulto , Humanos , Estudos Prospectivos , Sepse/diagnóstico , Estudos de Coortes , RNA
14.
PLoS One ; 17(10): e0276234, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36269702

RESUMO

Sex and gender are well-established determinants of health in adult and adolescent populations in low resource settings. There are limited data on sex as a determinant of host response to disease and clinical outcome in febrile children in sub-Saharan Africa, where the risk of infection-related mortality is greatest. We examined sex differences and gender biases in health-seeking behavior, clinical care, biological response to infection, or outcome in a prospective observational cohort of febrile children under 5 years of age presenting to a regional referral hospital in Jinja, Uganda. Main outcomes (stratified by sex) were disease severity at presentation measured by clinical and biological parameters, clinical management (e.g., time to see a physician, treatment by diagnosis), and disease outcome (e.g., mortality). Clinical measures of disease severity included Lambaréné Organ Dysfunction Score (LODS), Signs of Inflammation in Children that Kill (SICK), and the Pediatric Early Death Index for Africa (PEDIA). Biological measures of disease severity were assessed using circulating markers of immune and endothelial activation associated with severe and fatal infections. Differences in outcome by sex were analyzed using bivariate analyses with Bonferroni correction for multiple comparisons. In this cohort of febrile patients admitted to hospital (n = 2049), malaria infection was common (59.2%). 15.9% of children presented with severe disease (LODS score ≥ 2). 97 children (4.7%) died, and most deaths (n = 83) occurred within 48 hours of hospital admission. Clinical measures of disease severity at presentation, clinical management, and outcome (e.g., mortality) did not differ by sex in children under five years of age. Host response to infection, as determined by endothelial and inflammatory mediators (e.g., sTREM1, Ang-2) quantified at hospital presentation, did not differ by sex. In this cohort of children under the age of five, sex was not a principal determinant of disease severity at hospital presentation, clinical management, disease outcome, or biological response to infection (p-values not significant for all comparisons, after Bonferroni correction). The results suggest that health seeking behavior by caregivers and clinical care in the hospital setting did not reflect a gender bias in this cohort.


Assuntos
Febre , Sexismo , Criança , Adolescente , Adulto , Humanos , Feminino , Masculino , Lactente , Pré-Escolar , Uganda/epidemiologia , Estudos Prospectivos , Índice de Gravidade de Doença , Hospitais , Encaminhamento e Consulta , Mediadores da Inflamação
15.
Crit Care ; 26(1): 278, 2022 09 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36104754

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Studies quantifying SARS-CoV-2 have focused on upper respiratory tract or plasma viral RNA with inconsistent association with clinical outcomes. The association between plasma viral antigen levels and clinical outcomes has not been previously studied. Our aim was to investigate the relationship between plasma SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid antigen (N-antigen) concentration and both markers of host response and clinical outcomes. METHODS: SARS-CoV-2 N-antigen concentrations were measured in the first study plasma sample (D0), collected within 72 h of hospital admission, from 256 subjects admitted between March 2020 and August 2021 in a prospective observational cohort of hospitalized patients with COVID-19. The rank correlations between plasma N-antigen and plasma biomarkers of tissue damage, coagulation, and inflammation were assessed. Multiple ordinal regression was used to test the association between enrollment N-antigen plasma concentration and the primary outcome of clinical deterioration at one week as measured by a modified World Health Organization (WHO) ordinal scale. Multiple logistic regression was used to test the association between enrollment plasma N-antigen concentration and the secondary outcomes of ICU admission, mechanical ventilation at 28 days, and death at 28 days. The prognostic discrimination of an externally derived "high antigen" cutoff of N-antigen ≥ 1000 pg/mL was also tested. RESULTS: N-antigen on D0 was detectable in 84% of study participants. Plasma N-antigen levels significantly correlated with RAGE (r = 0.61), IL-10 (r = 0.59), and IP-10 (r = 0.59, adjusted p = 0.01 for all correlations). For the primary outcome of clinical status at one week, each 500 pg/mL increase in plasma N-antigen level was associated with an adjusted OR of 1.05 (95% CI 1.03-1.08) for worse WHO ordinal status. D0 plasma N-antigen ≥ 1000 pg/mL was 77% sensitive and 59% specific (AUROC 0.68) with a positive predictive value of 23% and a negative predictive value of 93% for a worse WHO ordinal scale at day 7 compared to baseline. D0 N-antigen concentration was independently associated with ICU admission and 28-day mechanical ventilation, but not with death at 28 days. CONCLUSIONS: Plasma N-antigen levels are readily measured and provide important insight into the pathogenesis and prognosis of COVID-19. The measurement of N-antigen levels early in-hospital course may improve risk stratification, especially for identifying patients who are unlikely to progress to severe disease.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , SARS-CoV-2 , Humanos , Nucleocapsídeo , RNA Viral
16.
PLoS Med ; 19(7): e1004057, 2022 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35830474

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Despite the global burden of pneumonia, reliable triage tools to identify children in low-resource settings at risk of severe and fatal respiratory tract infection are lacking. This study assessed the ability of circulating host markers of immune and endothelial activation quantified at presentation, relative to currently used clinical measures of disease severity, to identify children with pneumonia who are at risk of death. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We conducted a secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study of children aged 2 to 59 months presenting to the Jinja Regional Hospital in Jinja, Uganda between February 2012 and August 2013, who met the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) diagnostic criteria for pneumonia. Circulating plasma markers of immune (IL-6, IL-8, CXCL-10/IP-10, CHI3L1, sTNFR1, and sTREM-1) and endothelial (sVCAM-1, sICAM-1, Angpt-1, Angpt-2, and sFlt-1) activation measured at hospital presentation were compared to lactate, respiratory rate, oxygen saturation, procalcitonin (PCT), and C-reactive protein (CRP) with a primary outcome of predicting 48-hour mortality. Of 805 children with IMCI pneumonia, 616 had severe pneumonia. Compared to 10 other immune and endothelial activation markers, sTREM-1 levels at presentation had the best predictive accuracy in identifying 48-hour mortality for children with pneumonia (AUROC 0.885, 95% CI 0.841 to 0.928; p = 0.03 to p < 0.001) and severe pneumonia (AUROC 0.870, 95% CI 0.824 to 0.916; p = 0.04 to p < 0.001). sTREM-1 was more strongly associated with 48-hour mortality than lactate (AUROC 0.745, 95% CI 0.664 to 0.826; p < 0.001), respiratory rate (AUROC 0.615, 95% CI 0.528 to 0.702; p < 0.001), oxygen saturation (AUROC 0.685, 95% CI 0.594 to 0.776; p = 0.002), PCT (AUROC 0.650, 95% CI 0.566 to 0.734; p < 0.001), and CRP (AUROC 0.562, 95% CI 0.472 to 0.653; p < 0.001) in cases of pneumonia and severe pneumonia. The main limitation of this study was the unavailability of radiographic imaging. CONCLUSIONS: In this cohort of Ugandan children, sTREM-1 measured at hospital presentation was a significantly better indicator of 48-hour mortality risk than other common approaches to risk stratify children with pneumonia. Measuring sTREM-1 at clinical presentation may improve the early triage, management, and outcome of children with pneumonia at risk of death. TRIAL REGISTRATION: The trial was registered at clinicaltrial.gov (NCT04726826).


Assuntos
Proteína C-Reativa , Pneumonia , Biomarcadores , Proteína C-Reativa/metabolismo , Criança , Estudos de Coortes , Humanos , Lactatos , Pneumonia/diagnóstico , Estudos Prospectivos , Medição de Risco , Uganda/epidemiologia
18.
BMC Med ; 20(1): 221, 2022 07 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35773743

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Acute kidney injury (AKI) and blackwater fever (BWF) are related but distinct renal complications of acute febrile illness in East Africa. The pathogenesis and prognostic significance of BWF and AKI are not well understood. METHODS: A prospective observational cohort study was conducted to evaluate the association between BWF and AKI in children hospitalized with an acute febrile illness. Secondary objectives were to examine the association of AKI and BWF with (i) host response biomarkers and (ii) mortality. AKI was defined using the Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes criteria and BWF was based on parental report of tea-colored urine. Host markers of immune and endothelial activation were quantified on admission plasma samples. The relationships between BWF and AKI and clinical and biologic factors were evaluated using multivariable regression. RESULTS: We evaluated BWF and AKI in 999 children with acute febrile illness (mean age 1.7 years (standard deviation 1.06), 55.7% male). At enrollment, 8.2% of children had a history of BWF, 49.5% had AKI, and 11.1% had severe AKI. A history of BWF was independently associated with 2.18-fold increased odds of AKI (95% CI 1.15 to 4.16). When examining host response, severe AKI was associated with increased immune and endothelial activation (increased CHI3L1, sTNFR1, sTREM-1, IL-8, Angpt-2, sFlt-1) while BWF was predominantly associated with endothelial activation (increased Angpt-2 and sFlt-1, decreased Angpt-1). The presence of severe AKI, not BWF, was associated with increased risk of in-hospital death (RR, 2.17 95% CI 1.01 to 4.64) adjusting for age, sex, and disease severity. CONCLUSIONS: BWF is associated with severe AKI in children hospitalized with a severe febrile illness. Increased awareness of AKI in the setting of BWF, and improved access to AKI diagnostics, is needed to reduce disease progression and in-hospital mortality in this high-risk group of children through early implementation of kidney-protective measures.


Assuntos
Injúria Renal Aguda , Febre Hemoglobinúrica , Injúria Renal Aguda/complicações , Injúria Renal Aguda/diagnóstico , Biomarcadores , Febre Hemoglobinúrica/complicações , Criança , Feminino , Mortalidade Hospitalar , Humanos , Lactente , Masculino , Prognóstico , Estudos Prospectivos
19.
Nat Med ; 28(6): 1141-1148, 2022 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35715504

RESUMO

Research and practice in critical care medicine have long been defined by syndromes, which, despite being clinically recognizable entities, are, in fact, loose amalgams of heterogeneous states that may respond differently to therapy. Mounting translational evidence-supported by research on respiratory failure due to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection-suggests that the current syndrome-based framework of critical illness should be reconsidered. Here we discuss recent findings from basic science and clinical research in critical care and explore how these might inform a new conceptual model of critical illness. De-emphasizing syndromes, we focus on the underlying biological changes that underpin critical illness states and that may be amenable to treatment. We hypothesize that such an approach will accelerate critical care research, leading to a richer understanding of the pathobiology of critical illness and of the key determinants of patient outcomes. This, in turn, will support the design of more effective clinical trials and inform a more precise and more effective practice at the bedside.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , SARS-CoV-2 , Cuidados Críticos , Estado Terminal , Humanos , Síndrome
20.
J Thromb Haemost ; 20(9): 2109-2118, 2022 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35592998

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Impaired ex vivo platelet aggregation is common in trauma patients. The mechanisms driving these impairments remain incompletely understood, but functional platelet exhaustion due to excessive in vivo activation is implicated. Given platelet adrenoreceptors and known catecholamine surges after injury, impaired ex vivo platelet aggregation in trauma patients may be linked to catecholamine-induced functional platelet exhaustion. OBJECTIVE: To determine the relationship of catecholamines with platelet-dependent hemostasis after injury and to model catecholamine-induced functional platelet exhaustion in healthy donor platelets. PATIENTS/METHODS: Whole blood was collected from 67 trauma patients as part of a prospective cohort study. Platelet aggregometry and rotational thromboelastometry were performed, and plasma epinephrine (EPI) and norepinephrine (NE) concentrations were measured. The effect of catecholamines on healthy donor platelets was examined in a microfluidic model, with platelet aggregometry, and by flow cytometry examining surface markers of platelet activation. RESULTS: In trauma patients, EPI and NE were associated with impaired platelet aggregation (both p < 0.05), and EPI was additionally associated with decreased viscoelastic clot strength, increased fibrinolysis, and mortality (all p < 0.05). In healthy donors, short duration incubation with EPI enhanced platelet aggregation, platelet adhesion under flow, and increased glycoprotein IIb/IIIa activation, while weaker effects were observed with NE. Compared with short incubation, longer incubation with EPI resulted in decreased platelet adhesion, platelet aggregation, and surface expression of glycoprotein IIb/IIIa. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest sympathoadrenal activation in trauma patients contributes to impaired ex vivo platelet aggregation, which mechanistically may be explained by a functionally exhausted platelet phenotype under prolonged exposure to high plasma catecholamine levels.


Assuntos
Plaquetas , Catecolaminas , Plaquetas/metabolismo , Catecolaminas/metabolismo , Catecolaminas/farmacologia , Humanos , Agregação Plaquetária , Complexo Glicoproteico GPIIb-IIIa de Plaquetas/metabolismo , Estudos Prospectivos
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