论文已发表
注册即可获取德孚的最新动态
IF 收录期刊
血液病患者肺炎相关急性呼吸窘迫综合征的肺微生物群特征和皮质类固醇反应
Authors Shen J , Hu Y, Lv J, Zhao H, Wang B, Yang S, Du A, Liu S, An Y
Received 12 December 2021
Accepted for publication 15 February 2022
Published 24 February 2022 Volume 2022:15 Pages 1317—1329
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/JIR.S353662
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single anonymous peer review
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Professor Ning Quan
Objective: In this study, we aim to classify hematological patients with the pneumonia-associated acute respiratory syndrome (ARDS) into different groups that were characterized by distinct early responsiveness to corticosteroids, describe the microbiota signatures of the non-responders and responders, and compare the prognosis of the two groups.
Methods: Hematological patients with ARDS were included and treated with mechanical ventilation and corticosteroid. According to the early improvement to the corticosteroid therapy, patients were classified as non-responders and responders. The lung microbiota signatures and the outcomes of the non-responders and responders were compared.
Results: Fifty patients were included in this study. Twenty-eight patients were classed as non-responders and 22 as responders. Compared to the non-responders, responders had higher serum levels of IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α and CRP, their lung microbiota was with lower alpha diversity and enriched with virus species. The responders had an overall higher ventilator free days than the non-responders [4 (0– 6) vs 6 (0– 10), p=0.034], for survivors the difference was more significant [5 (3– 6) vs 8 (3– 10), p=0.012]. Survival analysis showed that there was no difference in survival rate between the two groups over time (Log-rank p=0.073). When non-responders were stratified into subgroups of patients with infection or co-infection, those non-responders with co-infection had significantly lower survival rate than other patients (Log-rank p= 0.028).
Conclusion: For hematological patients with pneumonia-associated ARDS, the responders of corticosteroids had higher ventilator free days at day 28 than the non-responders. The microbiota signatures were distinct in the two groups. The non-responders with coinfections had the lowest survival rate when compared to the non-responders with no coinfections and the responders.
Keywords: microbiota, acute respiratory distress syndrome, corticosteroid, hematologic neoplasms