• Annals of surgery · Oct 2022

    High Dimensional Multi-omics Reveals Unique Characteristics of Early Plasma Administration in Polytrauma Patients with TBI.

    • Junru Wu, Hamed Moheimani, Shimena Li, Upendra K Kar, Jillian Bonaroti, Richard S Miller, Brian J Daley, Brian G Harbrecht, Jeffrey A Claridge, Danielle S Gruen, Herbert A Phelan, Francis X Guyette, Matthew D Neal, Jishnu Das, Jason L Sperry, and Timothy R Billiar.
    • Department of Cardiology, The 3rd Xiangya Hospital, Central South University, Changsha, China.
    • Ann. Surg. 2022 Oct 1; 276 (4): 673683673-683.

    ObjectivesThe authors sought to identify causal factors that explain the selective benefit of prehospital administration of thawed plasma (TP) in traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients using mediation analysis of a multiomic database.BackgroundThe Prehospital Air Medical Plasma (PAMPer) Trial showed that patients with TBI and a pronounced systemic response to injury [defined as endotype 2 (E2)], have a survival benefit from prehospital administration of TP. An interrogation of high dimensional proteomics, lipidomics and metabolomics previously demonstrated unique patterns in circulating biomarkers in patients receiving prehospital TP, suggesting that a deeper analysis could reveal causal features specific to TBI patients.MethodsA novel proteomic database (SomaLogic Inc., aptamer-based assay, 7K platform) was generated using admission blood samples from a subset of patients (n=149) from the PAMPer Trial. This proteomic dataset was combined with previously reported metabolomic and lipidomic datasets from these same patients. A 2-step analysis was performed to identify factors that promote survival in E2-TBI patients who had received early TP. First, features were selected using both linear and multivariate-latent-factor regression analyses. Then, the selected features were entered into the causal mediation analysis.ResultsCausal mediation analysis of observable features identified 16 proteins and 41 lipids with a high proportion of mediated effect (>50%) to explain the survival benefit of early TP in E2-TBI patients. The multivariate latent-factor regression analyses also uncovered 5 latent clusters of features with a proportion effect >30%, many in common with the observable features. Among the observable and latent features were protease inhibitors known to inhibit activated protein C and block fibrinolysis (SERPINA5 and CPB2), a clotting factor (factor XI), as well as proteins involved in lipid transport and metabolism (APOE3 and sPLA(2)-XIIA).ConclusionsThese findings suggest that severely injured patients with TBI process exogenous plasma differently than those without TBI. The beneficial effects of early TP in E2-TBI patients may be the result of improved blood clotting and the effect of brain protective factors independent of coagulation.

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