Journal of Clinical Medicine (Sep 2023)

Geriatric Surgery Produces a Hypoactive Molecular Phenotype in the Monocyte Immune Gene Transcriptome

  • Rachel L. Oren,
  • Rachel H. Grasfield,
  • Matthew B. Friese,
  • Lori B. Chibnik,
  • John H. Chi,
  • Michael W. Groff,
  • James D. Kang,
  • Zhongcong Xie,
  • Deborah J. Culley,
  • Gregory Crosby

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12196271
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 19
p. 6271

Abstract

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Surgery is a major challenge for the immune system, but little is known about the immune response of geriatric patients to surgery. We therefore investigated the impact of surgery on the molecular signature of circulating CD14+ monocytes, cells implicated in clinical recovery from surgery, in older patients. We enrolled older patients having elective joint replacement (N = 19) or spine (N = 16) surgery and investigated pre- to postoperative expression changes in 784 immune-related genes in monocytes. Joint replacement altered the expression of 489 genes (adjusted p 1. Spine surgery changed the expression of 209 genes (adjusted p 1. In both, the majority of genes with a |logFC| > 1 change were downregulated. In the combined group (N = 35), 471 transcripts were differentially expressed (adjusted p 1 and 72% of these were downregulated. Notably, 21 transcripts were common across procedures. Thus, elective surgery in older patients produces myriad changes in the immune gene transcriptome of monocytes, with many suggesting development of an immunocompromised/hypoactive phenotype. Because monocytes are strongly implicated in the quality of surgical recovery, this signature provides insight into the cellular and molecular mechanisms of the immune response to surgery and warrants further study as a potential biomarker for predicting poor outcomes in older surgical patients.

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