• Annals of medicine · Dec 2024

    Serum metabolomics profile identifies patients with community-acquired pneumonia infected by bacteria, fungi, and viruses.

    • Li Chen, Jianbo Xue, Yukun He, Lili Zhao, Ying Zhang, Lu Yin, Shining Fu, Wenyi Yu, Xinqian Ma, Yu Wang, Yanfen Tang, and Zhancheng Gao.
    • Department of Respiratory, Beijing Ditan Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, People's Republic of China.
    • Ann. Med. 2024 Dec 1; 56 (1): 23993202399320.

    PurposePatients with bacterial, fungal, and viral community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) were studied to determine their metabolic profiles.MethodsLoop-mediated isothermal amplification technology and nucleic acid sequence-dependent amplification combined with microfluidic chip technology were applied to screen multiple pathogens from respiratory tract samples. Eighteen patients with single bacterial infection (B-CAP), fifteen with single virus infection (V-CAP), twenty with single fungal infection (F-CAP), and twenty controls were enrolled. UHPLC-MS/MS analysis of untargeted serum samples for metabolic profiles. Multiple linear regression and Spearman's rank correlation analysis were used to determine associations between metabolites and clinical parameters. The sensitivity and specificity of the screened metabolites were also examined, along with their area under the curve.ResultsThe metabolic signatures of patients with CAP infected by bacteria, viruses, and fungi were markedly different from those of controls. The abundances of 45, 56, and 79 metabolites were significantly unbalanced. Among these differential metabolites, 11, 13, and 29 were unique to the B-CAP, V-CAP, and F-CAP groups, respectively. Bacterial infections were the only known causes of disturbances in the pentose and glucuronate and aldarate and ascorbate metabolism interconversions metabolic pathway.ConclusionsSerum metabolomic techniques based on UHPLC-MS/MS may identify differences between individuals with CAP who have been infected by various pathogens, and they can also build a metabolite signature for early detection of the origin of infection and prompt care.

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