Abstract

Older adults have significantly worse morbidity and mortality after severe trauma than younger cohorts. The competency of the innate immune response decreases with advancing age, especially after an inflammatory insult. Subsequent poor outcomes after trauma are caused in part by dysfunctional leukocytes derived from the host's hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs). Our objective was to analyze the bone marrow (BM) HSPC transcriptomic [mRNA and microRNA (miR)] responses to trauma in older and younger adults. BM was collected intraoperatively <9 days after initial injury from trauma patients with non-mild injury [ISS ≥ 9] or with shock (lactate ≥ 2, base deficit ≥ 5, MAP ≤ 65) who underwent operative fixation of a pelvic or long bone fracture. Samples were also analyzed based on age (<55 years and ≥55 years), ISS score and transfusion in the first 24 h, and compared to age/sex-matched controls from non-cancer elective hip replacement or purchased healthy younger adult human BM aspirates. mRNA and miR expression patterns were calculated from lineage-negative enriched HSPCs. 924 genes were differentially expressed in older trauma subjects vs. age/sex-matched controls, while 654 genes were differentially expressed in younger subjects vs. age/sex-matched control. Only 68 transcriptomic changes were shared between the two groups. Subsequent analysis revealed upregulation of transcriptomic pathways related to quantity, function, differentiation, and proliferation of HSPCs in only the younger cohort. miR expression differences were also identified, many of which were associated with cell cycle regulation. In summary, differences in the BM HSPC mRNA and miR expression were identified between older and younger adult trauma subjects. These differences in gene and miR expression were related to pathways involved in HSPC production and differentiation. These differences could potentially explain why older adult patients have a suboptimal hematopoietic response to trauma. Although immunomodulation of HSPCs may be a necessary consideration to promote host protective immunity after host injury, the age related differences further highlight that patients may require an age-defined medical approach with interventions that are specific to their transcriptomic and biologic response. Also, targeting the older adult miRs may be possible for interventions in this patient population.

Highlights

  • Traumatic injury remains one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in the United States and the world, despite advances in the management of these patients [1, 2]

  • Trauma bone marrow samples were obtained during long bone or pelvic fracture repair < 9 days following blunt trauma (3.5 ± 2.4 days), and control samples were obtained at the time of elective surgery or from a commercial vendor

  • While there was no difference in genomic expression patterns based on the magnitude of the traumatic injury (ISS) nor based on blood transfusion in the first 24 h, age was associated with significantly different genomic expression patterns when compared to younger trauma patients of equivalent severity

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Traumatic injury remains one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in the United States and the world, despite advances in the management of these patients [1, 2]. A dysfunctional host immune system is responsible in part for post-traumatic morbidity and mortality [8]. Advanced age is associated with an attenuated acute peripheral leukocyte response and age is known to be one of the strongest risk factors for poor outcome after severe trauma with hemorrhagic shock [6, 11, 16]. As well as others, have demonstrated that elderly mice after severe injury are unable to mount an effective immune response as compared to juvenile mice. This is secondary, in part, to a failure of bone marrow progenitors to effectively respond to trauma [18]. In a murine trauma model, this resulted in increased mortality with delivery of post-trauma Pseudomonas pneumonia [18,19,20,21]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call