Data Driven Analysis Reveals Shared Transcriptome Response, Immune Cell Composition, and Distinct Mortality Rates Across Differing Etiologies of Critical Illness.


Journal

Critical care medicine
ISSN: 1530-0293
Titre abrégé: Crit Care Med
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0355501

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
03 2020
Historique:
entrez: 15 2 2020
pubmed: 15 2 2020
medline: 24 10 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Sepsis and trauma are common health problems and provide great challenges in critical care. Diverse patient responses to these conditions further complicate patient management and outcome prediction. Whole blood transcriptomics provides a unique opportunity to follow the molecular response in the critically ill. Prior results show robust and diverse genomic signal in the acute phase and others have found shared biological mechanisms across divergent disease etiologies. We hypothesize that selected transcriptomics responses, particularly immune mechanisms are shared across disease etiologies. We further hypothesize that these processes may identify homogenous patient subgroups with shared clinical course in critical illness deciphering disease heterogeneity. These processes may serve as universal markers for predicting a complicated clinical course and/or risk of a poor outcome. We present a system level, data driven, genome-wide analysis of whole blood gene expression for a total of 382 patients suffering from either abdominal sepsis (49), pulmonary sepsis (107) or trauma (158) and compare these to gene expression in healthy controls (68). We relied on available open genetic data from gene expression omnibus for patients diagnosed with abdominal sepsis, community-acquired pneumonia, or trauma which also included healthy control patients. Our results confirm that immune processes are shared across disease etiologies in critical illnesses. We identify two consistent and distinct patient subgroups through deconvolution of serum transcriptomics: 1) increased neutrophils and naïve CD4 cell fractions and 2) suppressed neutrophil fraction. Furthermore, we found immune and inflammatory processes were downregulated in subgroup 2, a configuration previously shown to be more susceptible to multiple organ failure. Correspondingly, this subgroup had significantly higher mortality rates in all three etiologies of illness (0% vs 6.1%, p = 3.1 × 10 for trauma; 15.0% vs 25.4%, p = 4.4 × 10 for community-acquired pneumonia, and 7.1% vs 20.0%, p = 3.4 × 10 for abdominal sepsis). We identify two consistent subgroups of critical illness based on serum transcriptomics and derived immune cell fractions, with significantly different survival rates. This may serve as a universal predictor of complicated clinical course or treatment response and, importantly, may identify opportunities for subgroup-specific immunomodulatory intervention.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32058371
doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000004128
pii: 00003246-202003000-00007
doi:

Substances chimiques

Biomarkers 0

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

338-343

Auteurs

Zsolt Zador (Z)

Department of Surgery, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada.

Alexander Landry (A)

Department of Surgery, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada.

Michael Balas (M)

Department of Surgery, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada.

John C Marshall (JC)

Critical Illness and Injury Research Centre, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada.

Michael D Cusimano (MD)

Department of Surgery, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada.

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