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Neutrophils-related host factors associated with severe disease and fatality in patients with influenza infection

Authors :
Tang, BM
Shojaei, M
Teoh, S
Meyers, A
Ho, J
Ball, TB
Keynan, Y
Pisipati, A
Kumar, A
Eisen, DP
Lai, K
Gillett, M
Santram, R
Geffers, R
Schreiber, J
Mozhui, K
Huang, S
Parnell, GP
Nalos, M
Holubova, M
Chew, T
Booth, D
McLean, A
Schughart, K
Tang, BM
Shojaei, M
Teoh, S
Meyers, A
Ho, J
Ball, TB
Keynan, Y
Pisipati, A
Kumar, A
Eisen, DP
Lai, K
Gillett, M
Santram, R
Geffers, R
Schreiber, J
Mozhui, K
Huang, S
Parnell, GP
Nalos, M
Holubova, M
Chew, T
Booth, D
McLean, A
Schughart, K
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Severe influenza infection has no effective treatment available. One of the key barriers to developing host-directed therapy is a lack of reliable prognostic factors needed to guide such therapy. Here, we use a network analysis approach to identify host factors associated with severe influenza and fatal outcome. In influenza patients with moderate-to-severe diseases, we uncover a complex landscape of immunological pathways, with the main changes occurring in pathways related to circulating neutrophils. Patients with severe disease display excessive neutrophil extracellular traps formation, neutrophil-inflammation and delayed apoptosis, all of which have been associated with fatal outcome in animal models. Excessive neutrophil activation correlates with worsening oxygenation impairment and predicted fatal outcome (AUROC 0.817-0.898). These findings provide new evidence that neutrophil-dominated host response is associated with poor outcomes. Measuring neutrophil-related changes may improve risk stratification and patient selection, a critical first step in developing host-directed immune therapy.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1315718239
Document Type :
Electronic Resource