• Critical care medicine · Sep 2018

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Exploratory Application of Neuropharmacometabolomics in Severe Childhood Traumatic Brain Injury.

    • Fanuel T Hagos, Philip E Empey, Pengcheng Wang, Xiaochao Ma, Samuel M Poloyac, Hülya Bayir, Patrick M Kochanek, Michael J Bell, and ClarkRobert S BRSBClinical and Translational Science Institute, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA.Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA..
    • Center for Clinical Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA.
    • Crit. Care Med. 2018 Sep 1; 46 (9): 147114791471-1479.

    ObjectivesTo employ metabolomics-based pathway and network analyses to evaluate the cerebrospinal fluid metabolome after severe traumatic brain injury in children and the capacity of combination therapy with probenecid and N-acetylcysteine to impact glutathione-related and other pathways and networks, relative to placebo treatment.DesignAnalysis of cerebrospinal fluid obtained from children enrolled in an Institutional Review Board-approved, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of a combination of probenecid and N-acetylcysteine after severe traumatic brain injury (Trial Registration NCT01322009).SettingThirty-six-bed PICU in a university-affiliated children's hospital.Patients And SubjectsTwelve children 2-18 years old after severe traumatic brain injury and five age-matched control subjects.InterventionProbenecid (25 mg/kg) and N-acetylcysteine (140 mg/kg) or placebo administered via naso/orogastric tube.Measurements And Main ResultsThe cerebrospinal fluid metabolome was analyzed in samples from traumatic brain injury patients 24 hours after the first dose of drugs or placebo and control subjects. Feature detection, retention time, alignment, annotation, and principal component analysis and statistical analysis were conducted using XCMS-online. The software "mummichog" was used for pathway and network analyses. A two-component principal component analysis revealed clustering of each of the groups, with distinct metabolomics signatures. Several novel pathways with plausible mechanistic involvement in traumatic brain injury were identified. A combination of metabolomics and pathway/network analyses showed that seven glutathione-centered pathways and two networks were enriched in the cerebrospinal fluid of traumatic brain injury patients treated with probenecid and N-acetylcysteine versus placebo-treated patients. Several additional pathways/networks consisting of components that are known substrates of probenecid-inhibitable transporters were also identified, providing additional mechanistic validation.ConclusionsThis proof-of-concept neuropharmacometabolomics assessment reveals alterations in known and previously unidentified metabolic pathways and supports therapeutic target engagement of the combination of probenecid and N-acetylcysteine treatment after severe traumatic brain injury in children.

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