Immune Phenotype and Postoperative Complications After Elective Surgery

OBJECTIVESTo characterize and quantify accumulating immunologic alterations, pre and postoperatively in patients undergoing elective surgical procedures.BACKGROUNDElective surgery is an anticipatable, controlled human injury. Although the human response to injury is generally stereotyped, individual...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of surgery 2023-12, Vol.278 (6), p.873-882
Hauptverfasser: Moris, Dimitrios, Barfield, Richard, Chan, Cliburn, Chasse, Scott, Stempora, Linda, Xie, Jichun, Plichta, Jennifer K., Thacker, Julie, Harpole, David H., Purves, Todd, Lagoo-Deenadayalan, Sandhya, Hwang, Eun-Sil Shelley, Kirk, Allan D.
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container_end_page 882
container_issue 6
container_start_page 873
container_title Annals of surgery
container_volume 278
creator Moris, Dimitrios
Barfield, Richard
Chan, Cliburn
Chasse, Scott
Stempora, Linda
Xie, Jichun
Plichta, Jennifer K.
Thacker, Julie
Harpole, David H.
Purves, Todd
Lagoo-Deenadayalan, Sandhya
Hwang, Eun-Sil Shelley
Kirk, Allan D.
description OBJECTIVESTo characterize and quantify accumulating immunologic alterations, pre and postoperatively in patients undergoing elective surgical procedures.BACKGROUNDElective surgery is an anticipatable, controlled human injury. Although the human response to injury is generally stereotyped, individual variability exists. This makes surgical outcomes less predictable, even after standardized procedures, and may provoke complications in patients unable to compensate for their injury. One potential source of variation is found in immune cell maturation, with phenotypic changes dependent on an individual's unique, lifelong response to environmental antigens.METHODSWe enrolled 248 patients in a prospective trial facilitating comprehensive biospecimen and clinical data collection in patients scheduled to undergo elective surgery. Peripheral blood was collected preoperatively, and immediately on return to the postanesthesia care unit. Postoperative complications that occurred within 30 days after surgery were captured.RESULTSAs this was an elective surgical cohort, outcomes were generally favorable. With a median follow-up of 6 months, the overall survival at 30 days was 100%. However, 20.5% of the cohort experienced a postoperative complication (infection, readmission, or system dysfunction). We identified substantial heterogeneity of immune senescence and terminal differentiation phenotypes in surgical patients. More importantly, phenotypes indicating increased T-cell maturation and senescence were associated with postoperative complications and were evident preoperatively.CONCLUSIONSThe baseline immune repertoire may define an immune signature of resilience to surgical injury and help predict risk for surgical complications.
doi_str_mv 10.1097/SLA.0000000000005864
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Although the human response to injury is generally stereotyped, individual variability exists. This makes surgical outcomes less predictable, even after standardized procedures, and may provoke complications in patients unable to compensate for their injury. One potential source of variation is found in immune cell maturation, with phenotypic changes dependent on an individual's unique, lifelong response to environmental antigens.METHODSWe enrolled 248 patients in a prospective trial facilitating comprehensive biospecimen and clinical data collection in patients scheduled to undergo elective surgery. Peripheral blood was collected preoperatively, and immediately on return to the postanesthesia care unit. Postoperative complications that occurred within 30 days after surgery were captured.RESULTSAs this was an elective surgical cohort, outcomes were generally favorable. With a median follow-up of 6 months, the overall survival at 30 days was 100%. 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Although the human response to injury is generally stereotyped, individual variability exists. This makes surgical outcomes less predictable, even after standardized procedures, and may provoke complications in patients unable to compensate for their injury. One potential source of variation is found in immune cell maturation, with phenotypic changes dependent on an individual's unique, lifelong response to environmental antigens.METHODSWe enrolled 248 patients in a prospective trial facilitating comprehensive biospecimen and clinical data collection in patients scheduled to undergo elective surgery. Peripheral blood was collected preoperatively, and immediately on return to the postanesthesia care unit. Postoperative complications that occurred within 30 days after surgery were captured.RESULTSAs this was an elective surgical cohort, outcomes were generally favorable. With a median follow-up of 6 months, the overall survival at 30 days was 100%. 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title Immune Phenotype and Postoperative Complications After Elective Surgery
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