Scientific Reports (Jun 2022)

Elevated plasma level of the glycolysis byproduct methylglyoxal on admission is an independent biomarker of mortality in ICU COVID-19 patients

  • Fadhel A. Alomar,
  • Marai N. Alshakhs,
  • Salah Abohelaika,
  • Hassan M. Almarzouk,
  • Mohammed Almualim,
  • Amein K. Al-Ali,
  • Fahad Al-Muhanna,
  • Mohammed F. Alomar,
  • Mousa J. Alhaddad,
  • Mohammed S. Almulaify,
  • Faisal S. Alessa,
  • Ahmed S. Alsalman,
  • Ahmed Alaswad,
  • Sean R. Bidasee,
  • Hassan A. Alsaad,
  • Rudaynah A. Alali,
  • Mona H. AlSheikh,
  • Mohammed S. Akhtar,
  • Mohammed Al Mohaini,
  • Abdulkhaliq J. Alsalman,
  • Hussain Alturaifi,
  • Keshore R. Bidasee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-12751-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 22

Abstract

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Abstract Biomarkers to identify ICU COVID-19 patients at high risk for mortality are urgently needed for therapeutic care and management. Here we found plasma levels of the glycolysis byproduct methylglyoxal (MG) were 4.4-fold higher in ICU patients upon admission that later died (n = 33), and 1.7-fold higher in ICU patients that survived (n = 32),compared to uninfected controls (n = 30). The increased MG in patients that died correlated inversely with the levels of the MG-degrading enzyme glyoxalase-1 (r 2 = − 0.50), and its co-factor glutathione (r 2 = − 0.63), and positively with monocytes (r 2 = 0.29). The inflammation markers, SSAO (r 2 = 0.52), TNF-α (r 2 = 0.41), IL-1β (r 2 = 0.25), CRP (r 2 = 0.26) also correlated positively with MG. Logistic regression analysis provides evidence of a significant relationship between the elevated MG upon admission into ICU and death (P < 0.0001), with 42% of the death variability explained. From these data we conclude that elevated plasma MG on admission is a novel independent biomarker that predicts mortality in ICU COVID-19 patients.