在接受败血症评估的儿童中识别感染类型和器官功能障碍的宿主基因表达特征:一项多中心队列研究。

IF 19.9 1区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS
Prof Luregn J Schlapbach PhD , Devika Ganesamoorthy PhD , Clare Wilson BChir , Sainath Raman MBBS PhD , Shane George MPH , Peter J Snelling MPHTM , Natalie Phillips MPhil , Adam Irwin PhD , Natalie Sharp BSc , Renate Le Marsney MPH , Arjun Chavan MD , Allison Hempenstall MPH , Seweryn Bialasiewicz PhD , Anna D MacDonald PhD , Prof Keith Grimwood MD , Jessica C Kling PhD , Stephen J McPherson PhD , Antje Blumenthal Dr rer nat , Myrsini Kaforou PhD , Prof Michael Levin PhD , Lachlan Coin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:败血症是指宿主对感染的反应失调,导致危及生命的器官功能障碍。目前还缺乏描述败血症宿主反应失调的生物标志物。我们旨在开发宿主基因表达特征,以预测细菌或病毒感染患儿的器官功能障碍:这项队列研究在澳大利亚昆士兰州四家医院的急诊科和重症监护室进行,招募了入院时接受了诊断测试(包括血液培养)的 1 个月至 17 岁疑似败血症患儿。血液全血 RNA 测序采用 Illumina NovaSeq(美国加利福尼亚州圣迭戈市)进行。在 2020 年 3 月 31 日之前完成表型、监测和 RNA 提取的样本被纳入发现队列;在 2021 年 10 月 27 日之前收集或完成的样本被纳入脓毒症儿科感染快速诊断(RAPIDS)内部验证队列。外部验证队列由欧洲儿童危及生命传染病观察性研究(EUCLIDS)的RNA测序基因表达计数数据组成,该研究在2012年至2016年期间招募了九个欧洲国家的重症感染儿童。研究人员采用特征选择方法,为疾病类别(细菌感染与病毒感染)和疾病严重程度(采样后24小时内是否出现器官功能障碍)推导出新的基因特征。主要终点是在确诊细菌感染与病毒感染的情况下,采血 24 小时后出现器官功能障碍。基因特征表现以接收者操作特征曲线下面积(AUC)和95% CI报告:2017年9月25日至2021年10月27日期间,907名患者入组。595名患者的血样被纳入发现队列,312名儿童的血样被纳入RAPIDS验证队列。我们得出了一个十基因疾病分类特征,该特征在区分 RAPIDS 验证队列中的细菌感染和病毒感染方面的 AUC 为 94-1%(95% CI 90-6-97-7)。十基因疾病严重程度特征在预测 RAPIDS 验证队列中取样后 24 小时内器官功能障碍方面的 AUC 为 82-2%(95% CI 76-3-88-1)。同时使用疾病分类和疾病严重程度特征预测取样 24 小时内的器官功能障碍,预测细菌感染患者的 AUC 为 90-5%(95% CI 83-3-97-6),预测病毒感染患者的 AUC 为 94-7%(87-8-100-0)。在外部 EUCLIDS 验证数据集(n=362)中,疾病等级和疾病严重程度可预测取样时的器官功能障碍,预测细菌感染患者的 AUC 为 70-1% (95% CI 44-1-96-2) ,预测病毒感染患者的 AUC 为 69-6% (53-1-86-0):在接受败血症评估的儿童中,特异于细菌和病毒感染的新型宿主转录组特征可以识别导致器官功能障碍的宿主反应失调:澳大利亚政府医学研究未来基金基因组健康未来任务、昆士兰儿童医院基金会、布里斯班迪亚曼蒂纳健康合作伙伴、急诊医学基金会、黄金海岸医院基金会、远北昆士兰基金会、汤斯维尔医院和健康服务SERTA补助金以及澳大利亚传染病研究中心。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Host gene expression signatures to identify infection type and organ dysfunction in children evaluated for sepsis: a multicentre cohort study

Background

Sepsis is defined as dysregulated host response to infection that leads to life-threatening organ dysfunction. Biomarkers characterising the dysregulated host response in sepsis are lacking. We aimed to develop host gene expression signatures to predict organ dysfunction in children with bacterial or viral infection.

Methods

This cohort study was done in emergency departments and intensive care units of four hospitals in Queensland, Australia, and recruited children aged 1 month to 17 years who, upon admission, underwent a diagnostic test, including blood cultures, for suspected sepsis. Whole-blood RNA sequencing of blood was performed with Illumina NovaSeq (San Diego, CA, USA). Samples with completed phenotyping, monitoring, and RNA extraction by March 31, 2020, were included in the discovery cohort; samples collected or completed thereafter and by Oct 27, 2021, constituted the Rapid Paediatric Infection Diagnosis in Sepsis (RAPIDS) internal validation cohort. An external validation cohort was assembled from RNA sequencing gene expression count data from the observational European Childhood Life-threatening Infectious Disease Study (EUCLIDS), which recruited children with severe infection in nine European countries between 2012 and 2016. Feature selection approaches were applied to derive novel gene signatures for disease class (bacterial vs viral infection) and disease severity (presence vs absence of organ dysfunction 24 h post-sampling). The primary endpoint was the presence of organ dysfunction 24 h after blood sampling in the presence of confirmed bacterial versus viral infection. Gene signature performance is reported as area under the receiver operating characteristic curves (AUCs) and 95% CI.

Findings

Between Sept 25, 2017, and Oct 27, 2021, 907 patients were enrolled. Blood samples from 595 patients were included in the discovery cohort, and samples from 312 children were included in the RAPIDS validation cohort. We derived a ten-gene disease class signature that achieved an AUC of 94·1% (95% CI 90·6–97·7) in distinguishing bacterial from viral infections in the RAPIDS validation cohort. A ten-gene disease severity signature achieved an AUC of 82·2% (95% CI 76·3–88·1) in predicting organ dysfunction within 24 h of sampling in the RAPIDS validation cohort. Used in tandem, the disease class and disease severity signatures predicted organ dysfunction within 24 h of sampling with an AUC of 90·5% (95% CI 83·3–97·6) for patients with predicted bacterial infection and 94·7% (87·8–100·0) for patients with predicted viral infection. In the external EUCLIDS validation dataset (n=362), the disease class and disease severity predicted organ dysfunction at time of sampling with an AUC of 70·1% (95% CI 44·1–96·2) for patients with predicted bacterial infection and 69·6% (53·1–86·0) for patients with predicted viral infection.

Interpretation

In children evaluated for sepsis, novel host transcriptomic signatures specific for bacterial and viral infection can identify dysregulated host response leading to organ dysfunction.

Funding

Australian Government Medical Research Future Fund Genomic Health Futures Mission, Children's Hospital Foundation Queensland, Brisbane Diamantina Health Partners, Emergency Medicine Foundation, Gold Coast Hospital Foundation, Far North Queensland Foundation, Townsville Hospital and Health Services SERTA Grant, and Australian Infectious Diseases Research Centre.

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来源期刊
Lancet Child & Adolescent Health
Lancet Child & Adolescent Health Psychology-Developmental and Educational Psychology
CiteScore
40.90
自引率
0.80%
发文量
381
期刊介绍: The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, an independent journal with a global perspective and strong clinical focus, presents influential original research, authoritative reviews, and insightful opinion pieces to promote the health of children from fetal development through young adulthood. This journal invite submissions that will directly impact clinical practice or child health across the disciplines of general paediatrics, adolescent medicine, or child development, and across all paediatric subspecialties including (but not limited to) allergy and immunology, cardiology, critical care, endocrinology, fetal and neonatal medicine, gastroenterology, haematology, hepatology and nutrition, infectious diseases, neurology, oncology, psychiatry, respiratory medicine, and surgery. Content includes articles, reviews, viewpoints, clinical pictures, comments, and correspondence, along with series and commissions aimed at driving positive change in clinical practice and health policy in child and adolescent health.
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