Channing Division of Network Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
J Thromb Haemost. 2018 Mar;16(3):500-507. doi: 10.1111/jth.13937. Epub 2018 Jan 30.
Essentials Risk-stratification often fails to predict clinical deterioration in pulmonary embolism (PE). First-ever high-throughput metabolomics analysis of risk-stratified PE patients. Changes in circulating metabolites reflect a compromised energy metabolism in PE. Metabolites play a key role in the pathophysiology and risk stratification of PE.
Background Patients with acute pulmonary embolism (PE) exhibit wide variation in clinical presentation and outcomes. Our understanding of the pathophysiologic mechanisms differentiating low-risk and high-risk PE is limited, so current risk-stratification efforts often fail to predict clinical deterioration and are insufficient to guide management. Objectives To improve our understanding of the physiology differentiating low-risk from high-risk PE, we conducted the first-ever high-throughput metabolomics analysis (843 named metabolites) comparing PE patients across risk strata within a nested case-control study. Patients/methods We enrolled 92 patients diagnosed with acute PE and collected plasma within 24 h of PE diagnosis. We used linear regression and pathway analysis to identify metabolites and pathways associated with PE risk-strata. Results When we compared 46 low-risk with 46 intermediate/high-risk PEs, 50 metabolites were significantly different after multiple testing correction. These metabolites were enriched in the following pathways: tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, fatty acid metabolism (acyl carnitine) and purine metabolism, (hypo)xanthine/inosine containing. Additionally, energy, nucleotide and amino acid pathways were downregulated in intermediate/high-risk PE patients. When we compared 28 intermediate-risk with 18 high-risk PE patients, 41 metabolites differed at a nominal P-value level. These metabolites were enriched in fatty acid metabolism (acyl cholines), and hemoglobin and porphyrin metabolism. Conclusion Our results suggest that high-throughput metabolomics can provide insight into the pathophysiology of PE. Specifically, changes in circulating metabolites reflect compromised energy metabolism in intermediate/high-risk PE patients. These findings demonstrate the important role metabolites play in the pathophysiology of PE and highlight metabolomics as a potential tool for risk stratification of PE.
急性肺栓塞(PE)患者的临床表现和结局存在广泛差异。我们对区分低危和高危 PE 的病理生理机制的理解有限,因此目前的风险分层方法往往无法预测临床恶化,不足以指导管理。方法:为了更好地了解区分低危和高危 PE 的生理学机制,我们在嵌套病例对照研究中对风险分层内的 PE 患者进行了首次高通量代谢组学分析(843 种命名代谢物)。患者/方法:我们纳入了 92 例急性 PE 患者,并在 PE 诊断后 24 小时内采集血浆。我们使用线性回归和途径分析来识别与 PE 风险分层相关的代谢物和途径。结果:当我们比较 46 例低危和 46 例中/高危 PE 时,经过多次测试校正后,有 50 种代谢物存在显著差异。这些代谢物富集在以下途径中:三羧酸(TCA)循环、脂肪酸代谢(酰基辅酶 A)和嘌呤代谢(次黄嘌呤/肌苷)。此外,中间/高危 PE 患者的能量、核苷酸和氨基酸途径下调。当我们比较 28 例中危和 18 例高危 PE 患者时,有 41 种代谢物在名义 P 值水平上存在差异。这些代谢物富集在脂肪酸代谢(酰基胆碱)和血红蛋白及卟啉代谢中。结论:我们的研究结果表明,高通量代谢组学可以深入了解 PE 的病理生理学。具体来说,循环代谢物的变化反映了中间/高危 PE 患者能量代谢受损。这些发现表明代谢物在 PE 的病理生理学中起着重要作用,并强调了代谢组学作为 PE 风险分层的潜在工具。