PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Composition of early life leukocyte populations in preterm infants with and without late-onset sepsis.

  • Julie Hibbert,
  • Tobias Strunk,
  • Elizabeth Nathan,
  • Amy Prosser,
  • Dorota Doherty,
  • Karen Simmer,
  • Peter Richmond,
  • David Burgner,
  • Andrew Currie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0264768
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 3
p. e0264768

Abstract

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BackgroundComposition of leukocyte populations in the first month of life remains incompletely characterised, particularly in preterm infants who go on to develop late-onset sepsis (LOS).AimTo characterise and compare leukocyte populations in preterm infants with and without LOS during the first month of life.Study designSingle-centre prospective observational cohort study.ParticipantsInfants born Outcome measuresPeripheral blood samples were collected at 1, 7, 14, 21 and 28 days of life. Leukocyte populations were characterised using 5-fluorophore-6-marker flow cytometry. Absolute leukocyte counts and frequency of total CD45+ leukocytes of each population were adjusted for GA, birth weight z-scores, sex and total leukocyte count.ResultsOf 119 preterm infants enrolled, 43 (36%) had confirmed or clinical LOS, with a median onset at 13 days (range 6-26). Compared to infants without LOS, the adjusted counts and frequency of neutrophils, basophils and non-cytotoxic T lymphocytes were generally lower and immature granulocytes were higher over the first month of life in infants who developed LOS. Specific time point comparisons identified lower adjusted neutrophil counts on the first day of life in those infants who developed LOS more than a week later, compared to those without LOS, albeit levels were within the normal age-adjusted range. Non-cytotoxic T lymphocyte counts and/or frequencies were lower in infants following LOS on days 21 and 28 when compared to those who did not develop LOS.ConclusionChanges in non-cytotoxic T lymphocytes occurred following LOS suggesting sepsis-induced immune suppression.