Transcriptomic Biomarkers Associated With Microbiological Etiology and Disease Severity in Childhood Pneumonia.

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Tác giả: Evan J Anderson, Sandra R Arnold, Steven E Bosinger, C Buddy Creech, Kathryn M Edwards, Shruti Gautam, Johannes Goll, Tyler Grimes, Natalia Jimenez, Jonathan A McCullers, Octavio Ramilo, Derek J Williams

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 518.6 Numerical methods in analysis

Thông tin xuất bản: United States : The Journal of infectious diseases , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 215500

BACKGROUND: Challenges remain in discerning microbiologic etiology and disease severity in childhood pneumonia. Defining host transcriptomic profiles during illness may facilitate improved diagnostic and prognostic approaches. METHODS: Using whole blood RNA sequencing from 222 hospitalized children with radiographic pneumonia and 45 age-matched controls, we identified differentially expressed (DE) genes that best identified children according to detected microbial pathogens (viral only vs bacterial only and typical vs atypical bacterial [with or without [±] viral co-detection]) and an ordinal measure of phenotypic severity (moderate, severe, very severe). RESULTS: Overall, 135 (61%) children had viral-only detections, 15 (7%) had typical bacterial detections (± viral co-detections), and 26 (12%) had atypical bacterial detections (± viral co-detections). Eleven DE genes distinguished between viral-only and bacterial-only detections. Sixteen DE genes distinguished between atypical and typical bacterial detections (± viral co-detections). Nineteen DE genes distinguished between levels of pneumonia severity, including 4 genes also identified in the viral-only versus bacterial-only model (IGHGP, PI3, CD177, RAP1GAP1) and 4 genes from the typical versus atypical bacterial model (PRSS23, IFI27, OLFM4, ABO). CONCLUSIONS: We identified transcriptomic biomarkers associated with microbial detections and phenotypic severity in children hospitalized with pneumonia. These DE genes are promising candidates for validation and translation into diagnostic and prognostic tools.
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