Whole blood gene expression profiles to assess pathogenesis and disease severity in infants with respiratory syncytial virus infection

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading cause of viral lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) and hospitalization in infants. Mostly because of the incomplete understanding of the disease pathogenesis, there is no licensed vaccine, and treatment remains symptomatic. We analyzed whole bloo...

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Veröffentlicht in:PLoS medicine 2013-11, Vol.10 (11), p.e1001549-e1001549
Hauptverfasser: Mejias, Asuncion, Dimo, Blerta, Suarez, Nicolas M, Garcia, Carla, Suarez-Arrabal, M Carmen, Jartti, Tuomas, Blankenship, Derek, Jordan-Villegas, Alejandro, Ardura, Monica I, Xu, Zhaohui, Banchereau, Jacques, Chaussabel, Damien, Ramilo, Octavio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading cause of viral lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) and hospitalization in infants. Mostly because of the incomplete understanding of the disease pathogenesis, there is no licensed vaccine, and treatment remains symptomatic. We analyzed whole blood transcriptional profiles to characterize the global host immune response to acute RSV LRTI in infants, to characterize its specificity compared with influenza and human rhinovirus (HRV) LRTI, and to identify biomarkers that can objectively assess RSV disease severity. This was a prospective observational study over six respiratory seasons including a cohort of infants hospitalized with RSV (n = 135), HRV (n = 30), and influenza (n = 16) LRTI, and healthy age- and sex-matched controls (n = 39). A specific RSV transcriptional profile was identified in whole blood (training cohort, n = 45 infants; Dallas, Texas, US) and validated in three different cohorts (test cohort, n = 46, Dallas, Texas, US; validation cohort A, n = 16, Turku, Finland; validation cohort B, n = 28, Columbus, Ohio, US) with high sensitivity (94% [95% CI 87%-98%]) and specificity (98% [95% CI 88%-99%]). It classified infants with RSV LRTI versus HRV or influenza LRTI with 95% accuracy. The immune dysregulation induced by RSV (overexpression of neutrophil, inflammation, and interferon genes, and suppression of T and B cell genes) persisted beyond the acute disease, and immune dysregulation was greatly impaired in younger infants (
ISSN:1549-1676
1549-1277
1549-1676
DOI:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001549