International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Sep 2024)

Synergistic impact of innate immunity hyper-activation and endothelial dysfunction on the magnitude of organ failure in the infection-sepsis continuum

  • Amanda de la Fuente,
  • Jaime López-Sánchez,
  • Luis Mario Vaquero-Roncero,
  • María Merino García,
  • María Elisa Sánchez Barrado,
  • Miguel Vicente Sánchez-Hernández,
  • Nadia Garcia-Mateo,
  • Jesús Rico-Feijoo,
  • Luis Muñoz-Bellvís,
  • Rafael González de Castro,
  • Ana P. Tedim,
  • Alicia Ortega,
  • Omar Abdel-lah Fernández,
  • Alejandro Suárez-de-la-Rica,
  • Emilio Maseda,
  • Ignacio Trejo González,
  • Geovanna Liszeth García Carrera,
  • José Miguel Marcos-Vidal,
  • Juan Manuel Nieto Arranz,
  • Luis Chiscano-Camón,
  • Ricard Ferrer,
  • Juan Carlos Ruiz-Rodríguez,
  • Juan José González-López,
  • José Alberto Vila Fernández,
  • Regina Prieto Carballo,
  • Raul Lopez-Izquierdo,
  • Sonsoles Garrosa,
  • Beatriz Barón,
  • Carmen Esteban-Velasco,
  • César Aldecoa,
  • Jesús F. Bermejo-Martin

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 146
p. 107142

Abstract

Read online

Objectives: Identifying host response biomarkers implicated in the emergence of organ failure during infection is key to improving the early detection of this complication. Methods: Twenty biomarkers of innate immunity, T-cell response, endothelial dysfunction, coagulation, and immunosuppression were profiled in 180 surgical patients with infections of diverse severity (IDS) and 53 with no infection (nIDS). Those better differentiating IDS/nIDS in the area under the curve were combined to test their association with the sequential organ failure assessment score by linear regression analysis in IDS. Results were validated in another IDS cohort of 174 patients. Results: C-reactive protein, procalcitonin, pentraxin-3, lipocalin-2 (LCN2), tumoral necrosis factor-α, angiopoietin-2, triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-1 (TREM-1) and interleukin (IL)-15 yielded an area under the curve ≥0.75 to differentiate IDS from nIDS. The combination of LCN2, IL-15, TREM-1, angiopoietin-2 (Dys-4) showed the strongest association with sequential organ failure assessment score in IDS (adjusted regression coefficient; standard error; P): Dys-4 (3.55;0.44; <0.001), LCN2 (2.24; 0.28; <0.001), angiopoietin-2 (1.92; 0.33; <0.001), IL-15 (1.78; 0.40; <0.001), TREM-1(1.74; 0.46; <0.001), tumoral necrosis factor-α (1.60; 0.31; <0.001), pentraxin-3 (1.12; 0.18; <0.001), procalcitonin (0.85; 0.12; <0.001). Dys-4 provided similar results in the validation cohort. Conclusions: There is a synergistic impact of innate immunity hyper-activation (LCN2, IL-15, TREM-1) and endothelial dysfunction (angiopoietin-2) on the magnitude of organ failure during infection.

Keywords