TY - JOUR
T1 - The blood transcriptional response in patients developing intensive care unit-acquired pneumonia
AU - de Brabander, Justin
AU - Michels, Erik H. A.
AU - Butler, Joe M.
AU - Reijnders, Tom D. Y.
AU - van Engelen, Tjitske S. R.
AU - Leite, Giuseppe G. F.
AU - Paling, Fleur P.
AU - Klarenbeek, Augustijn M.
AU - Sie, Daoud L. S.
AU - Boyer, Roxane E.
AU - Sweeney, Timothy E.
AU - Bonten, Marc J. M.
AU - Timbermont, Leen
AU - Malhotra-Kumar, Surbhi
AU - Kluytmans, Jan A. J. W.
AU - Peters-Sengers, Hessel
AU - ASPIRE-ICU study team
AU - van der Poll, Tom
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright ©The authors 2025.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Background Immune response dysregulation has been implicated in the development of intensive care unit (ICU)-acquired pneumonia. We aimed to determine differences in the longitudinal blood transcriptional response between patients who develop ICU-acquired pneumonia (cases) and those who do not (controls). Methods We performed a case–cohort study in mechanically ventilated trauma and surgery patients with ICU stays >2 days, enrolled in 30 hospitals across Europe. We collected blood for RNA sequencing at baseline, day 7 and (in cases) the day of pneumonia diagnosis. We performed gene set enrichment analysis and analysed longitudinal gene expression changes using linear mixed models. External validation was performed using an independent trauma cohort. Results We enrolled 113 cases and 115 controls, with similar baseline characteristics. At baseline (median 2 days after ICU admission), cases showed upregulated gene pathways relating to innate immunity, haemostasis and metabolism, and downregulated adaptive immune pathways. These changes persisted at the day of pneumonia diagnosis (median 6 days, compared to day 7 in controls). In the longitudinal comparison, cases exhibited enhanced upregulation of innate immunity, adaptive immunity and haemostasis pathways, along with enhanced downregulation of metabolism pathways, relative to controls (all p<0.00001, except haemostasis p<0.05). These findings were largely externally validated. Cases had higher quantitative sepsis response signature scores (p<0.001), reflective of immune dysregulation. Conclusion Patients developing ICU-acquired pneumonia exhibit distinct blood transcriptional responses shortly after ICU admission and in the subsequent path to pneumonia, suggestive of broad immune dysfunction with both immunosuppressive and inflammatory features.
AB - Background Immune response dysregulation has been implicated in the development of intensive care unit (ICU)-acquired pneumonia. We aimed to determine differences in the longitudinal blood transcriptional response between patients who develop ICU-acquired pneumonia (cases) and those who do not (controls). Methods We performed a case–cohort study in mechanically ventilated trauma and surgery patients with ICU stays >2 days, enrolled in 30 hospitals across Europe. We collected blood for RNA sequencing at baseline, day 7 and (in cases) the day of pneumonia diagnosis. We performed gene set enrichment analysis and analysed longitudinal gene expression changes using linear mixed models. External validation was performed using an independent trauma cohort. Results We enrolled 113 cases and 115 controls, with similar baseline characteristics. At baseline (median 2 days after ICU admission), cases showed upregulated gene pathways relating to innate immunity, haemostasis and metabolism, and downregulated adaptive immune pathways. These changes persisted at the day of pneumonia diagnosis (median 6 days, compared to day 7 in controls). In the longitudinal comparison, cases exhibited enhanced upregulation of innate immunity, adaptive immunity and haemostasis pathways, along with enhanced downregulation of metabolism pathways, relative to controls (all p<0.00001, except haemostasis p<0.05). These findings were largely externally validated. Cases had higher quantitative sepsis response signature scores (p<0.001), reflective of immune dysregulation. Conclusion Patients developing ICU-acquired pneumonia exhibit distinct blood transcriptional responses shortly after ICU admission and in the subsequent path to pneumonia, suggestive of broad immune dysfunction with both immunosuppressive and inflammatory features.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105004026621&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1183/13993003.00592-2024
DO - 10.1183/13993003.00592-2024
M3 - Article
C2 - 39848701
SN - 0903-1936
VL - 65
JO - European respiratory journal
JF - European respiratory journal
IS - 4
M1 - 2400592
ER -