Disease‐specific plasma protein profiles in patients with fever after traveling to tropical areas

Author:

Sundling Christopher123ORCID,Yman Victor14ORCID,Mousavian Zaynab123,Angenendt Sina1ORCID,Foroogh Fariba1,von Horn Ellen1,Lautenbach Maximilian Julius123,Grunewald Johan35,Färnert Anna123,Sondén Klara1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine Solna Karolinska Institutet Stockholm Sweden

2. Department of Infectious Diseases Karolinska University Hospital Stockholm Sweden

3. Center for Molecular Medicine Karolinska Institutet Stockholm Sweden

4. Department of Infectious Diseases Stockholm South Hospital Stockholm Sweden

5. Respiratory Medicine Unit, Department of Medicine, Solna Karolinska Institutet and Karolinska University Hospital Solna Stockholm Sweden

Abstract

AbstractFever is common among individuals seeking healthcare after traveling to tropical regions. Despite the association with potentially severe disease, the etiology is often not determined. Plasma protein patterns can be informative to understand the host response to infection and can potentially indicate the pathogen causing the disease. In this study, we measured 49 proteins in the plasma of 124 patients with fever after travel to tropical or subtropical regions. The patients had confirmed diagnoses of either malaria, dengue fever, influenza, bacterial respiratory tract infection, or bacterial gastroenteritis, representing the most common etiologies. We used multivariate and machine learning methods to identify combinations of proteins that contributed to distinguishing infected patients from healthy controls, and each other. Malaria displayed the most unique protein signature, indicating a strong immunoregulatory response with high levels of IL10, sTNFRI and II, and sCD25 but low levels of sCD40L. In contrast, bacterial gastroenteritis had high levels of sCD40L, APRIL, and IFN‐γ, while dengue was the only infection with elevated IFN‐α2. These results suggest that characterization of the inflammatory profile of individuals with fever can help to identify disease‐specific host responses, which in turn can be used to guide future research on diagnostic strategies and therapeutic interventions.

Funder

Magnus Bergvalls Stiftelse

Tore Nilsons Stiftelse för Medicinsk Forskning

Svenska Läkaresällskapet

Åke Wiberg Stiftelse

Hjärt-Lungfonden

Vetenskapsrådet

Karolinska Institutet

Publisher

Wiley

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