Bijun Wen,James M. Njunge,Céline Bourdon,Gerard Bryan Gonzales,Bonface M. Gichuki,Dorothy Lee,David S. Wishart,Moses M. Ngari,Emmanuel Chimwezi,Johnstone Thitiri,Laura Mwalekwa,Wieger Voskuijl,James A. Berkley,Robert Bandsma
出处
期刊:Science Advances [American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)] 日期:2022-02-16卷期号:8 (7)被引量:27
Children admitted to hospital with an acute illness and concurrent severe malnutrition [complicated severe malnutrition (CSM)] have a high risk of dying. The biological processes underlying their mortality are poorly understood. In this case-control study nested within a multicenter randomized controlled trial among children with CSM in Kenya and Malawi, we found that blood metabolomic and proteomic profiles robustly differentiated children who died ( n = 92) from those who survived ( n = 92). Fatalities were characterized by increased energetic substrates (tricarboxylic acid cycle metabolites), microbial metabolites (e.g., propionate and isobutyrate), acute phase proteins (e.g., calprotectin and C-reactive protein), and inflammatory markers (e.g., interleukin-8 and tumor necrosis factor–α). These perturbations indicated disruptions in mitochondria-related bioenergetic pathways and sepsis-like responses. This study identified specific biomolecular disturbances associated with CSM mortality, revealing that systemic inflammation and bioenergetic deficits are targetable pathophysiological processes for improving survival of this vulnerable population.