Pneumococcal pneumonia and endotoxemia: An experimental and clinical reappraisal

Author:

Godon Jeanne1,Charles Pierre‐Emmanuel23,Nguyen Sylvie3,de Barros Jean‐Paul Pais4,Choubley Hélène4,Jacquier Marine23,Tetu Jennifer5,Quenot Jean‐Pierre236,Luu Maxime7,Binquet Christine6,Masson David3,Piroth Lionel16,Blot Mathieu136ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Infectious Diseases Dijon‐Bourgogne University Hospital Dijon France

2. Department of Intensive Care Dijon‐Bourgogne University Hospital Dijon France

3. Lipness Team, INSERM Research Centre LNC‐UMR1231 and LabEx LipSTIC University of Burgundy Dijon France

4. Lipidomic Analytic Platform Dijon France

5. Laboratory of bacteriology Dijon‐Bourgogne University Hospital Dijon France

6. CHU Dijon‐Bourgogne, INSERM, Université de Bourgogne CIC 1432 Module Épidémiologie Clinique, Dijon France and LabEx LipSTIC University of Burgundy Dijon France

7. CHU Dijon‐Bourgogne, INSERM, Université de Bourgogne CIC 1432 Module Plurithématique, Dijon University of Burgundy Dijon France

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundCirculating endotoxins could result from bacterial digestive translocation during sepsis, thus contributing to uncontrolled systemic inflammation, leading in turn to organ dysfunction. We addressed this issue in the setting of severe pneumococcal pneumonia.MethodsEndotoxemia was measured in a clinically relevant rabbit model of ventilated pneumococcal pneumonia and in 110 patients with bacteraemic pneumonia, using a patented mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS) method for detection of 3‐OH fatty acids (C10, C12, C14, C16 and C18), which are molecules bound to the lipid A motif of LPS.ResultsWhereas higher levels of systemic inflammation and organ dysfunctions were found, there was no significant difference in lipopolysaccharide concentrations when infected rabbits were compared to non‐infected ones, or when patients were compared to healthy volunteers.ConclusionsSeemingly, endotoxins do not drive the overwhelming inflammation associated with severe forms of pneumococcal pneumonia.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry,Biochemistry,General Medicine

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