Abstract

IntroductionTwo recent, independent, studies conducted novel metabolomics analyses relevant to human sepsis progression; one was a human model of endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide (LPS)) challenge (experimental endotoxemia) and the other was community acquired pneumonia and sepsis outcome diagnostic study (CAPSOD). The purpose of the present study was to assess the concordance of metabolic responses to LPS and community-acquired sepsis.MethodsWe tested the hypothesis that the patterns of metabolic response elicited by endotoxin would agree with those in clinical sepsis. Alterations in the plasma metabolome of the subjects challenged with LPS were compared with those of sepsis patients who had been stratified into two groups: sepsis patients with confirmed infection and non-infected patients who exhibited systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) criteria. Common metabolites between endotoxemia and both these groups were individually identified, together with their direction of change and functional classifications.ResultsResponse to endotoxemia at the metabolome level elicited characteristics that agree well with those observed in sepsis patients despite the high degree of variability in the response of these patients. Moreover, some distinct features of SIRS have been identified. Upon stratification of sepsis patients based on 28-day survival, the direction of change in 21 of 23 metabolites was the same in endotoxemia and sepsis survival groups.ConclusionsThe observed concordance in plasma metabolomes of LPS-treated subjects and sepsis survivors strengthens the relevance of endotoxemia to clinical research as a physiological model of community-acquired sepsis, and gives valuable insights into the metabolic changes that constitute a homeostatic response. Furthermore, recapitulation of metabolic differences between sepsis non-survivors and survivors in LPS-treated subjects can enable further research on the development and assessment of rational clinical therapies to prevent sepsis mortality. Compared with earlier studies which focused exclusively on comparing transcriptional dynamics, the distinct metabolomic responses to systemic inflammation with or without confirmed infection, suggest that the metabolome is much better at differentiating these pathophysiologies. Finally, the metabolic changes in the recovering patients shift towards the LPS-induced response pattern strengthening the notion that the metabolic, as well as transcriptional responses, characteristic to the endotoxemia model represent necessary and “healthy” responses to infectious stimuli.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13054-015-0783-2) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Two recent, independent, studies conducted novel metabolomics analyses relevant to human sepsis progression; one was a human model of endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide (LPS)) challenge and the other was community acquired pneumonia and sepsis outcome diagnostic study (CAPSOD)

  • Endotoxemia induced by elective administration of LPS to healthy subjects has served as an invaluable tool for obtaining mechanistic insight into homeostatic inflammatory responses

  • We aimed to evaluate the significance of observed metabolic perturbations in endotoxemia and how they relate to corresponding changes observed in patients with symptoms of community-acquired sepsis at the time of presentation to the emergency departments

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Summary

Introduction

Independent, studies conducted novel metabolomics analyses relevant to human sepsis progression; one was a human model of endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide (LPS)) challenge (experimental endotoxemia) and the other was community acquired pneumonia and sepsis outcome diagnostic study (CAPSOD). The purpose of the present study was to assess the concordance of metabolic responses to LPS and community-acquired sepsis. Sepsis is defined as the combination of an infection with multiple features of ‘systemic inflammatory response syndrome’ (SIRS) [1] and is one of the oldest and most enigmatic conditions in medicine. Current treatment guidelines include cardiorespiratory resuscitation and non-specific protocols aimed at mitigating immediate threats of uncontrolled infection [3]. A significant barrier to progress is the perceived inadequacy of experimental models that can reproduce the pathophysiology of the disease in humans

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