Pneumonia in the first week after polytrauma is associated with reduced blood levels of soluble herpes virus entry mediator

Front Immunol. 2023 Dec 22:14:1259423. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2023.1259423. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Background: Pneumonia develops frequently after major surgery and polytrauma and thus in the presence of systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) and organ dysfunction. Immune checkpoints balance self-tolerance and immune activation. Altered checkpoint blood levels were reported for sepsis. We analyzed associations of pneumonia incidence in the presence of SIRS during the first week of critical illness and trends in checkpoint blood levels.

Materials and methods: Patients were studied from day two to six after admission to a surgical intensive care unit (ICU). Blood was sampled and physician experts retrospectively adjudicated upon the presence of SIRS and Sepsis-1/2 every eight hours. We measured the daily levels of immune checkpoints and inflammatory markers by bead arrays for polytrauma patients developing pneumonia. Immune checkpoint time series were additionally determined for clinically highly similar polytrauma controls remaining infection-free during follow-up. We performed cluster analyses. Immune checkpoint time trends in cases and controls were compared with hierarchical linear models. For patients with surgical trauma and with and without sepsis, selected immune checkpoints were determined in study baseline samples.

Results: In polytrauma patients with post-injury pneumonia, eleven immune checkpoints dominated subcluster 3 that separated subclusters 1 and 2 of myeloid markers from subcluster 4 of endothelial activation, tissue inflammation, and adaptive immunity markers. Immune checkpoint blood levels were more stable in polytrauma cases than controls, where they trended towards an increase in subcluster A and a decrease in subcluster B. Herpes virus entry mediator (HVEM) levels (subcluster A) were lower in cases throughout. In unselected surgical patients, sepsis was not associated with altered HVEM levels at the study baseline.

Conclusion: Pneumonia development after polytrauma until ICU-day six was associated with decreased blood levels of HVEM. HVEM signaling may reduce pneumonia risk by strengthening myeloid antimicrobial defense and dampening lymphoid-mediated tissue damage. Future investigations into the role of HVEM in pneumonia and sepsis development and as a predictive biomarker should consider the etiology of critical illness and the site of infection.

Keywords: critical illness; herpesvirus entry mediator; immune checkpoint; immunosuppression; pneumonia; polytrauma; sepsis; systemic inflammatory response syndrome.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Critical Illness
  • Humans
  • Pneumonia*
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Sepsis*
  • Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome
  • Virus Internalization

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This study was supported by the Klaus Tschira Foundation, Germany (project number 00.0277.2015). The funder had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, the decision to publish, or the preparation of the manuscript.