Biomarker Discovery, Genentech, Inc., South San Francisco, California, USA.
Biomarker Development, Genentech, Inc., South San Francisco, California, USA.
Pediatr Pulmonol. 2022 Feb;57(2):519-528. doi: 10.1002/ppul.25776. Epub 2021 Dec 7.
Biomarkers that can risk-stratify children with influenza virus lower respiratory infection may identify patients for targeted intervention. Early elevation of alveolar-related proteins in the bloodstream in these patients could indicate more severe lung damage portending worse outcomes.
We used a mouse model of human influenza infection and evaluated relationships between lung pathophysiology and surfactant protein D (SP-D), SP-A, and Club cell protein 16 (CC16). We then measured SP-A, SP-D, and CC16 levels in plasma samples from 94 children with influenza-associated acute respiratory failure (PICFLU cohort), excluding children with underlying conditions explaining disease severity. We tested for associations between levels of circulating proteins and disease severity including the diagnosis of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), mechanical ventilator, intensive care unit and hospital days, and hospital mortality.
Circulating SP-D showed a greater increase than SP-A and CC16 in mice with increased alveolar-vascular permeability following influenza infection. In the PICFLU cohort, SP-D was associated with moderate-severe ARDS diagnosis (p = 0.01) and with mechanical ventilator (r = 0.45, p = 0.002), ICU (r = 0.44, p = 0.002), and hospital days (r = 0.37, p = 0.001) in influenza-infected children without bacterial coinfection. Levels of SP-D were lower in children with secondary bacterial pneumonia (p = 0.01) and not associated with outcomes. CC16 and SP-A levels did not differ with bacterial coinfection and were not consistently associated with severe outcomes.
SP-D has potential as an early circulating biomarker reflecting a degree of lung damage caused directly by influenza virus infection in children. Secondary bacterial pneumonia alters SP-D biomarker performance.
能够对流感病毒下呼吸道感染患儿进行风险分层的生物标志物,可能有助于识别需要靶向干预的患者。这些患者血液中肺泡相关蛋白的早期升高,可能表明更严重的肺损伤预示着更差的结局。
我们使用人源流感病毒感染的小鼠模型,评估肺生理学与表面活性蛋白 D(SP-D)、表面活性蛋白 A(SP-A)和克拉拉细胞蛋白 16(CC16)之间的关系。然后,我们检测了 94 例流感相关急性呼吸衰竭患儿(PICFLU 队列)的血浆样本中 SP-A、SP-D 和 CC16 的水平,排除了能够解释疾病严重程度的基础疾病。我们检测了循环蛋白水平与疾病严重程度之间的相关性,包括急性呼吸窘迫综合征(ARDS)的诊断、机械通气、重症监护病房(ICU)和住院天数以及住院死亡率。
与流感感染后肺泡-血管通透性增加相关的,是 SP-D 而非 SP-A 和 CC16 在小鼠中的循环水平升高更明显。在 PICFLU 队列中,SP-D 与中度至重度 ARDS 诊断相关(p=0.01),与机械通气(r=0.45,p=0.002)、ICU(r=0.44,p=0.002)和住院天数(r=0.37,p=0.001)相关,且不伴有细菌合并感染。在伴有继发性细菌性肺炎的患儿中,SP-D 水平较低(p=0.01),且与结局无关。CC16 和 SP-A 水平与细菌合并感染无关,且与严重结局不一致。
SP-D 具有作为反映儿童流感病毒感染直接导致的肺损伤程度的早期循环生物标志物的潜力。继发性细菌性肺炎改变了 SP-D 生物标志物的性能。