作者
Tjitske S. R. van Engelen,Tom D. Y. Reijnders,Fleur P. Paling,Marc J. M. Bonten,Leen Timbermont,Surbhi Malhotra‐Kumar,Jan Kluytmans,Hessel Peters‐Sengers,Tom van der Poll,Martin Wolkewitz,Omar Ali,Alexey Ruzin,Leen Timbermont,Christine Lammens,Sebastiaan Hullegie,Darren Troeman,Denise van Hout,Daniël Prins,Rubana N. Kalyani,Mark Eickhoff,Kathryn Shoemaker,Tuba Vilken,Jelle Vlaeminck,Jasmine Coppens,Thomas van der Schalk,Basil Britto Xavier,E. Odisseeva,R Vatcheva,Michal Drab,Jaromír Vajter,Kadri Tamme,Muriel Fartoukh,Alain Lepape,Mickaël Landais,Gaëtan Plantefève,Evelina Tacconelli,Achim J. Kaasch,Róbert Jurkinya,Iványi Zsolt,Miranda van Rijen,Olaf L. Cremer,Biljana Carević,Jasna Jevdjić,D. Escudero,Miguel Sánchez García,Cristina Prat,B. Suberviola-Cañas,Ángel Arenzana-Seisdedos,Hürrem Bodur,Cenk Kıraklı,İlkay Bozkurt,Sandra Long
摘要
Abstract Background Immune suppression has been implicated in the occurrence of pneumonia in critically ill patients. We tested the hypothesis that Intensive Care Unit (ICU)-acquired pneumonia is associated with broad host immune aberrations in the trajectory to pneumonia, encompassing inflammatory, endothelial and coagulation responses. We compared plasma protein biomarkers reflecting the systemic host response in critically ill patients who acquire a new pneumonia (cases) with those who do not (controls). Methods We performed a nested case–control study in patients undergoing mechanical ventilation at ICU admission with an expected stay of at least 48 h enrolled in 30 hospitals in 11 European countries. Nineteen host response biomarkers reflective of key pathophysiological domains were measured in plasma obtained on study inclusion and day 7, and—in cases—on the day of pneumonia diagnosis. Results Of 1997 patients, 316 developed pneumonia (15.8%) and 1681 did not (84.2%). Plasma protein biomarker analyses, performed in cases and a randomly selected subgroup of controls (1:2 ratio to cases, n = 632), demonstrated considerable variation across time points and patient groups. Yet, cases showed biomarker concentrations suggestive of enhanced inflammation and a more disturbed endothelial barrier function, both at study enrollment (median 2 days after ICU admission) and in the path to pneumonia diagnosis (median 5 days after ICU admission). Baseline host response biomarker aberrations were most profound in patients who developed pneumonia either shortly (< 5 days, n = 105) or late (> 10 days, n = 68) after ICU admission. Conclusions Critically ill patients who develop an ICU-acquired pneumonia, compared with those who do not, display alterations in plasma protein biomarker concentrations indicative of stronger proinflammatory, procoagulant and (injurious) endothelial cell responses. Trial registration : ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02413242, posted April 9th, 2015. Graphical abstract