Macrophage activation markers are associated with infection and mortality in patients with acute liver failure

Author:

Cavazza Anna12,Triantafyllou Evangelos3,Savoldelli Roberto4,Mujib Salma12,Jerome Ellen12,Trovato Francesca M.12,Artru Florent12,Sheth Roosey12,Huang Xiao Hong1,Ma Yun1,Dazzi Francesco4,Pirani Tasneem12,Antoniades Charalambos G.12,Lee William M.5ORCID,McPhail Mark J.12ORCID,Karvellas Constantine J.6ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Inflammation Biology, School of Inflammation and Microbial Science, Institute of Liver Studies King's College London London UK

2. Liver Intensive Therapy Unit Institute of Liver Studies, King's College Hospital London UK

3. Section of Hepatology and Gastroenterology, Department of Metabolism, Digestion and Reproduction Imperial College London London UK

4. School of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine and Science King's College London London UK

5. Division of Digestive and Liver Diseases UT Southwestern Medical Center Dallas Texas USA

6. Division of Gastroenterology (Liver Unit), Department of Critical Care Medicine University of Alberta Edmonton Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackground and AimsAcute liver failure is a multisystem disorder with a high mortality and frequent need for emergency liver transplantation. Following massive innate immune system activation, soluble markers of macrophage activation are released during liver damage and their association with disease severity and prognosis requires exploration.MethodsPatients ALF from the United States Acute Liver Failure Study Group (USALFSG, n = 224) and King's College Hospital (n = 40) together with healthy controls (HC, n = 50) were recruited. Serum from early (Days 1–3) and late (>Day 3) time points were analysed for MAMs by enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay correlated to markers of illness severity and 21‐day spontaneous survival. Surface expression phenotyping was performed via Flow Cytometry on CD14+ monocytes.ResultsAll MAMs serum concentrations were significantly higher in ALF compared to controls (p < .0001). sCD206 concentration was higher in early and late stages of the disease in patients with bacteraemia (p = .002) and infection in general (p = .006). In MELD‐adjusted multivariate modelling, sCD206 and sCD163 were independently associated with mortality. CD14+ monocyte expression of CD206 (p < .001) was higher in patients with ALF compared with controls and correlated with SOFA score (p = .018). sCD206 was independently validated as a predictor of infection in an external cohort.ConclusionssCD206 is increased in serum of ALF patients with infections and poor outcome and is upregulated on CD14+ monocytes. Later measurements of sCD163 and sCD206 during the evolution of ALF have potential as mechanistic predictors of mortality. sCD206 should be explored as a biomarker of sepsis and mortality in ALF.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Medical Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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