American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Apr 2024
Molecular Phenotypes of ARDS in the ROSE Trial have Differential Outcomes and Gene Expression Patterns That Differ at Baseline and Longitudinally Over Time.
Rationale: Two molecular phenotypes have been identified in acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). In the ROSE (Reevaluation of Systemic Early Neuromuscular Blockade) trial of cisatracurium in moderate to severe ARDS, we addressed three unanswered questions: 1) Do the same phenotypes emerge in a more severe ARDS cohort with earlier recruitment; 2) Do phenotypes respond differently to neuromuscular blockade? and 3) What biological pathways most differentiate inflammatory phenotypes?Methods: We performed latent class analysis in ROSE using preenrollment clinical and protein biomarkers. In a subset of patients (n = 134), we sequenced whole-blood RNA using enrollment and Day 2 samples and performed differential gene expression and pathway analyses. ⋯ However, for the class-defining plasma proteins in the latent class analysis, no correlation was observed with their corresponding genes' expression. Conclusions: The hyperinflammatory and hypoinflammatory phenotypes have different clinical, protein, and dynamic transcriptional characteristics. These findings support the clinical and biological potential of molecular phenotypes to advance precision care in ARDS.