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Untargeted lipidomics uncovers lipid signatures that distinguish severe from moderate forms of acutely decompensated cirrhosis

Authors :
Universitat Rovira i Virgili
Claria, Joan; Curto, Anna; Moreau, Richard; Colsch, Benoit; Lopez-Vicario, Cristina; Lozano, Juan Jose; Aguilar, Ferran; Castelli, Florence A.; Fenaille, Francois; Junot, Christophe; Zhang, Ingrid; Vinaixa, Maria; Yanes, Oscar; Caraceni, Paolo; Trebicka, Jonel; Fernandez, Javier; Angeli, Paolo; Jalan, Rajiv; Arroyo, Vicente
Universitat Rovira i Virgili
Claria, Joan; Curto, Anna; Moreau, Richard; Colsch, Benoit; Lopez-Vicario, Cristina; Lozano, Juan Jose; Aguilar, Ferran; Castelli, Florence A.; Fenaille, Francois; Junot, Christophe; Zhang, Ingrid; Vinaixa, Maria; Yanes, Oscar; Caraceni, Paolo; Trebicka, Jonel; Fernandez, Javier; Angeli, Paolo; Jalan, Rajiv; Arroyo, Vicente
Source :
Journal Of Hepatology; 10.1016/j.jhep.2021.06.043; Journal Of Hepatology. 75 (5): 1116-1127
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background & Aims: Acute decompensation (AD) of cirrhosis is a heterogeneous clinical entity associated with moderate mortality. In some patients, this condition develops quickly into the more deadly acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF), in which other organs such as the kidneys or brain fail. The aim of this study was to characterize the blood lipidome in a large series of patients with cirrhosis and identify specific signatures associated with AD and ACLF development. Methods: Serum untargeted lipidomics was performed in 561 patients with AD (518 without and 43 with ACLF) (discovery cohort) and in 265 patients with AD (128 without and 137 with ACLF) in whom serum samples were available to perform repeated measurements during the 28-day follow-up (validation cohort). Analyses were also performed in 78 patients with AD included in a therapeutic albumin trial (43 patients with compensated cirrhosis and 29 healthy individuals). Results: The circulating lipid landscape associated with cirrhosis was characterized by a generalized suppression, which was more manifest during AD and in non-surviving patients. By computing discriminating accuracy and the variable importance projection score for each of the 223 annotated lipids, we identified a sphingomyelin fingerprint specific for AD of cirrhosis and a distinct cholesteryl ester and lysophosphatidylcholine finger-print for ACLF. Liver dysfunction and infections were the prin-cipal net contributors to these fingerprints, which were dynamic and interchangeable between patients with AD whose condition worsened to ACLF and those who improved. Notably, blood lysophosphatidylcholine levels increased in these patients after albumin therapy. Conclusions: Our findings provide insights into the lipid land-scape associated with decompen

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Journal Of Hepatology; 10.1016/j.jhep.2021.06.043; Journal Of Hepatology. 75 (5): 1116-1127
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1443596402
Document Type :
Electronic Resource