Cell Reports Medicine
Volume 2, Issue 12, 21 December 2021, 100478
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Article
Multi-omic analysis in injured humans: Patterns align with outcomes and treatment responses

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xcrm.2021.100478Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • An integrated longitudinal multi-omic analysis of the human response to trauma

  • Systemic storm and massive consumption patterns are related to early mortality

  • Unique resolution and non-resolution signatures across multiple “omics” platforms

  • Only endotype 2-TBI patients with high UCHL1 levels benefit from early plasma

Summary

Trauma is a leading cause of death and morbidity worldwide. Here, we present the analysis of a longitudinal multi-omic dataset comprising clinical, cytokine, endotheliopathy biomarker, lipidome, metabolome, and proteome data from severely injured humans. A “systemic storm” pattern with release of 1,061 markers, together with a pattern suggestive of the “massive consumption” of 892 constitutive circulating markers, is identified in the acute phase post-trauma. Data integration reveals two human injury response endotypes, which align with clinical trajectory. Prehospital thawed plasma rescues only endotype 2 patients with traumatic brain injury (30-day mortality: 30.3 versus 75.0%; p = 0.0015). Ubiquitin carboxy-terminal hydrolase L1 (UCHL1) was identified as the most predictive circulating biomarker to identify endotype 2-traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients. These response patterns refine the paradigm for human injury, while the datasets provide a resource for the study of critical illness, trauma, and human stress responses.

Keywords

trauma
metabolomics
proteomics
multi-omics
host response
systemic storm
endotype
outcome
PAMPer trial
thawed plasma

Data and code availability

The proteomics and metabolomics data generated by this study are available at Mendeley Data https://doi.org/10.17632/vt8nhp2y2t.1. Code supporting the current study is deposited at https://github.com/Junru-max/PAMPer-Multi-omic-analysis. Any additional information required to reanalyze the data reported in this work paper is available from the Lead Contact upon request.

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Lead contact