Abstract
The immune response to major trauma has been analysed mainly within post-hospital admission settings where the inflammatory response is already underway and the early drivers of clinical outcome cannot be readily determined. Thus, there is a need to better understand the immediate immune response to injury and how this might influence important patient outcomes such as multi-organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS). In this study, we have assessed the immune response to trauma in 61 patients at three different post-injury time points (ultra-early (<=1h), 4-12h, 48-72h) and analysed relationships with the development of MODS. We developed a pipeline using Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator and Elastic Net feature selection methods that were able to identify 3 physiological features (decrease in neutrophil CD62L and CD63 expression and monocyte CD63 expression and frequency) as possible biomarkers for MODS development. After univariate and multivariate analysis for each feature alongside a stability analysis, the addition of these 3 markers to standard clinical trauma injury severity scores yields a Generalized Liner Model (GLM) with an average Area Under the Curve value of 0.92±0.06. This performance provides an 8% improvement over the Probability of Survival (PS14) outcome measure and a 13% improvement over the New Injury Severity Score (NISS) for identifying patients at risk of MODS.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 328 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Journal | Scientific Data |
Volume | 6 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 19 Dec 2019 |
Keywords
- Antigens, CD
- Area Under Curve
- Biomarkers
- Datasets as Topic
- Humans
- Linear Models
- Machine Learning
- Monocytes
- Multiple Organ Failure/diagnosis
- Neutrophils
- Probability
- Severity of Illness Index
- Survival Analysis