1. Biomarkers to Distinguish Bacterial From Viral Pediatric Clinical Pneumonia in a Malaria-Endemic Setting
- Author
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Pedro L. Alonso, Stephen F. Schaffner, Dyann F. Wirth, Danny A. Milner, Miguel Lanaspa, Bronwyn MacInnis, Christopher Uschnig, Steven A. Carr, Lola Madrid, Clarissa Valim, Michael A. Gillette, D. R. Mani, Karell G. Pellé, Quique Bassat, and Sozinho Acácio
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.drug_class ,Pneumonia, Viral ,030106 microbiology ,Antibiotics ,malaria ,diagnostic ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pneumonia, Bacterial ,medicine ,pneumonia ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Online Only Articles ,Child ,Pathogen ,business.industry ,Bacterial pneumonia ,medicine.disease ,Major Articles and Commentaries ,Pneumonia ,AcademicSubjects/MED00290 ,pediatric ,Infectious Diseases ,Virus Diseases ,Immunology ,Etiology ,biomarker ,Biomarker (medicine) ,business ,Biomarkers ,Malaria ,SLPI - Abstract
Background Differential etiologies of pediatric acute febrile respiratory illness pose challenges for all populations globally, but especially in malaria-endemic settings because the pathogens responsible overlap in clinical presentation and frequently occur together. Rapid identification of bacterial pneumonia with high-quality diagnostic tools would enable appropriate, point-of-care antibiotic treatment. Current diagnostics are insufficient, and the discovery and development of new tools is needed. We report a unique biomarker signature identified in blood samples to accomplish this. Methods Blood samples from 195 pediatric Mozambican patients with clinical pneumonia were analyzed with an aptamer-based, high-dynamic-range, quantitative assay (~1200 proteins). We identified new biomarkers using a training set of samples from patients with established bacterial, viral, or malarial pneumonia. Proteins with significantly variable abundance across etiologies (false discovery rate 90% sensitivity and >80% specificity, regardless of number of pathogen classes. Bacterial pneumonia was strongly associated with neutrophil markers—in particular, degranulation including HP, LCN2, LTF, MPO, MMP8, PGLYRP1, RETN, SERPINA1, S100A9, and SLPI. Conclusions Blood protein signatures highly associated with neutrophil biology reliably differentiated bacterial pneumonia from other causes. With appropriate technology, these markers could provide the basis for a rapid diagnostic for field-based triage for antibiotic treatment of pediatric pneumonia., Identification of new biomarkers to distinguish between viral and bacterial pneumonia is needed. These markers could provide the basis for a rapid diagnostic for field-based triage for antibiotic treatment of pediatric pneumonia.
- Published
- 2021
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