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Hyperferritinemia Screening to Aid Identification and Differentiation of Patients with Hyperinflammatory Disorders.

Authors :
Carol HA
Mayer AS
Zhang MS
Dang V
Varghese J
Martinez Z
Schneider C
Baker JE
Tsoukas P
Behrens EM
Cron RQ
Diorio C
Henderson LA
Schulert G
Lee P
Kernan KF
Canna SW
Source :
Journal of clinical immunology [J Clin Immunol] 2024 Sep 12; Vol. 45 (1), pp. 4. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Sep 12.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

High ferritin is an important and sensitive biomarker for the various forms of hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH), a diverse and deadly group of cytokine storm syndromes. Early action to prevent immunopathology in HLH often includes empiric immunomodulation, which can complicate etiologic work-up and prevent collection of early/pre-treatment research samples. To address this, we instituted an alert system at UPMC Children's Hospital where serum ferritin > 1000 ng/mL triggered real-time chart review, assessment of whether the value reflected "inflammatory hyperferritnemia (IHF)", and biobanking of remnant samples from consenting IHF patients. We extracted relevant clinical data; periodically measured serum total IL-18, IL-18 binding protein (IL-18BP), and CXCL9; retrospectively classified patients by etiology into infectious, rheumatic, or immune dysregulation; and subjected a subgroup of samples to a 96-analyte biomarker screen. 180 patients were identified, 30.5% of which had IHF. Maximum ferritin levels were significantly higher in patients with IHF than with either hemoglobinopathy or transplant, and highly elevated total IL-18 levels were distinctive to patients with Stills Disease and/or Macrophage Activation Syndrome (MAS). Multi-analyte analysis showed elevation in proteins associated with cytotoxic lymphocytes in all IHF samples when compared to healthy controls and depression of proteins such as ANGPT1 and VEGFR2 in samples from hyperferritinemic sepsis patients relative to non-sepsis controls. This real-time IFH screen proved feasible and efficient, validated prior observations about the specificity of IL-18, enabled early sample collection from a complex population, suggested a unique vascular biomarker signature in hyperferritinemic sepsis, and expanded our understanding of IHF heterogeneity.<br /> (© 2024. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1573-2592
Volume :
45
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of clinical immunology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39264477
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10875-024-01797-4