Smoking primes the metabolomic response in trauma

Author:

Gallagher Lauren T.,Erickson Christopher,D'Alessandro Angelo,Schaid Terry,Thielen Otto,Hallas William,Mitra Sanchayita,Stafford Preston,Moore Ernest E.,Silliman Christopher C.,Calfee Carolyn S.,Cohen Mitchell J.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION Smoking is a public health threat because of its well-described link to increased oxidative stress-related diseases including peripheral vascular disease and coronary artery disease. Tobacco use has been linked to risk of inpatient trauma morbidity including acute respiratory distress syndrome; however, its mechanistic effect on comprehensive metabolic heterogeneity has yet to be examined. METHODS Plasma was obtained on arrival from injured patients at a Level 1 trauma center and analyzed with modern mass spectrometry–based metabolomics. Patients were stratified by nonsmoker, passive smoker, and active smoker by lower, interquartile, and upper quartile ranges of cotinine intensity peaks. Patients were substratified by high injury/high shock (Injury Severity Score, ≥15; base excess, <−6) and compared with healthy controls. p Value of <0.05 following false discovery rate correction of t test was considered significant. RESULTS Forty-eight patients with high injury/high shock (7 nonsmokers [15%], 25 passive smokers [52%], and 16 active smokers [33%]) and 95 healthy patients who served as controls (30 nonsmokers [32%], 43 passive smokers [45%], and 22 active smokers [23%]) were included. Elevated metabolites in our controls who were active smokers include enrichment in chronic inflammatory and oxidative processes. Elevated metabolites in active smokers in high injury/high shock include enrichment in the malate-aspartate shuttle, tyrosine metabolism, carnitine synthesis, and oxidation of very long-chain fatty acids. CONCLUSION Smoking promotes a state of oxidative stress leading to mitochondrial dysfunction, which is additive to the inflammatory milieu of trauma. Smoking is associated with impaired mitochondrial substrate utilization of long-chain fatty acids, aspartate, and tyrosine, all of which accentuate oxidative stress following injury. This altered expression represents an ideal target for therapies to reduce oxidative damage toward the goal of personalized treatment of trauma patients. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Prognostic and Epidemiological; Level IV.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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