1. Multiomic molecular patterns of lipid dysregulation in a subphenotype of sepsis with higher shock incidence and mortality
- Author
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Augustin, Beulah, Wu, Dongyuan, Black, Lauren Page, Bertrand, Andrew, Sulaiman, Dawoud, Hopson, Charlotte, Jacob, Vinitha, Shavit, Jordan A, Hofmaenner, Daniel A, Labilloy, Guillaume, Smith, Leslie, Cagmat, Emilio, Graim, Kiley, Datta, Susmita, Reddy, Srinivasa T, and Guirgis, Faheem W
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Sepsis ,Human Genome ,Infectious Diseases ,Genetics ,Hematology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Inflammatory and immune system ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Male ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Aged ,Lipid Metabolism ,Lipidomics ,Incidence ,Phenotype ,Cholesterol ,Lipids ,Phenotyping ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Emergency & Critical Care Medicine ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundLipids play a critical role in defense against sepsis. We sought to investigate gene expression and lipidomic patterns of lipid dysregulation in sepsis.MethodsData from four adult sepsis studies were analyzed and findings were investigated in two external datasets. Previously characterized lipid dysregulation subphenotypes of hypolipoprotein (HYPO; low lipoproteins, increased mortality) and normolipoprotein (NORMO; higher lipoproteins, lower mortality) were studied. Leukocytes collected within 24 h of sepsis underwent RNA sequencing (RNAseq) and shotgun plasma lipidomics was performed.ResultsOf 288 included patients, 43% were HYPO and 57% were NORMO. HYPO patients exhibited higher median SOFA scores (9 vs 5, p =
- Published
- 2024