Villar Jesús, Flores Carlos, Pérez-Méndez Lina, Maca-Meyer Nicole, Espinosa Elena, Blanco Jesús, Sangüesa Ruben, Muriel Arturo, Tejera Paula, Muros Mercedes, Slutsky Arthur S
Multidisciplinary Organ Dysfunction Evaluation Research Network (MODERN), Research Unit, Hospital Universitario Dr. Negrin, Barranco de la Ballena, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Canary Islands, Spain.
Intensive Care Med. 2008 Mar;34(3):488-95. doi: 10.1007/s00134-007-0937-z. Epub 2007 Dec 5.
The insertion/deletion (I/D) of a 289 base pair Alu repeat sequence polymorphism in the angiotensin-converting enzyme gene (ACE) has been shown to predict susceptibility and outcome in the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). We hypothesized that the I/D polymorphism also confers susceptibility to sepsis and is a predisposing factor for morbidity and mortality of patients with severe sepsis.
Case-control study including 212 consecutive patients fulfilling criteria for severe sepsis admitted to a Spanish network of postsurgical and critical care units, and 364 population-based controls. Susceptibility to severe sepsis was evaluated as primary outcome; mortality in severe sepsis, susceptibility to sepsis-induced ARDS, and mortality in sepsis-induced ARDS were examined as secondary outcomes. An additive model of inheritance in which patients were classified into three genotype groups (II, ID, and DD) was used for association testing.
Genotype and allele frequencies of I/D were distributed similarly in all septic, ARDS, and non-ARDS patients and in population-based controls. ACE I/D polymorphism was not associated with severe sepsis susceptibility or mortality. The ACE I/D polymorphism was associated neither with sepsis-induced ARDS susceptibility (p=0.895) or mortality (p=0.950). These results remained nonsignificant when adjusted for other covariates using multiple logistic regression analysis or Kaplan-Meier estimates of 28-day survival.
Our data do not support an association of the ACE gene I/D polymorphism with susceptibility or mortality in severe sepsis or with sepsis-induced ARDS in Spanish patients.
血管紧张素转换酶基因(ACE)中一段289个碱基对的Alu重复序列多态性的插入/缺失(I/D)已被证明可预测急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ARDS)的易感性和预后。我们推测I/D多态性也会使人易患脓毒症,并且是严重脓毒症患者发病和死亡的一个易感因素。
病例对照研究,纳入了西班牙外科和重症监护病房网络收治的212例符合严重脓毒症标准的连续患者,以及364例基于人群的对照。将严重脓毒症的易感性作为主要结局进行评估;将严重脓毒症的死亡率、脓毒症诱导的ARDS的易感性以及脓毒症诱导的ARDS的死亡率作为次要结局进行研究。采用遗传的加性模型,将患者分为三个基因型组(II、ID和DD)进行关联测试。
I/D的基因型和等位基因频率在所有脓毒症患者、ARDS患者和非ARDS患者以及基于人群的对照中分布相似。ACE I/D多态性与严重脓毒症的易感性或死亡率无关。ACE I/D多态性与脓毒症诱导的ARDS易感性(p = 0.895)或死亡率(p = 0.950)均无关。当使用多因素逻辑回归分析或28天生存的Kaplan-Meier估计对其他协变量进行校正时,这些结果仍然无统计学意义。
我们的数据不支持ACE基因I/D多态性与西班牙患者严重脓毒症的易感性或死亡率以及脓毒症诱导的ARDS之间存在关联。