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Integrative Omics of Aspiration in Lung Transplantation

Authors
Neujahr, D. C.Uppal, K.Lockard, C.Lee, K.Tran, V.Jones, D. P.Youngja, P.
Issue Date
Apr-2013
Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
Citation
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation, v.32, no.4, pp.S250 - S250
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation
Volume
32
Number
4
Start Page
S250
End Page
S250
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/163078
DOI
10.1016/j.healun.2013.01.646
ISSN
1053-2498
Abstract
Purpose Prior studies have defined lung biomarkers associated with graft injury in lung transplant. We have developed a lung metabolomic profile of bile acid aspiration. We correlated the metabolites of aspiration to other omic measures of lung injury. Methods and Materials We performed metabolomic profiling on 29 recipients who had episodic bile detected in lung lavages. Each patient contributed a lung lavage specimen that was positive and negative for bile acid resulting in 58 total samples. Lavages were tested using C18 liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectroscopy. We used three approaches: Principle component analysis, Principle component regression, and Hierarchical clustering analysis. 252 Bile acid associated features were found at the intersection of these approaches. Cluster analysis developed 6 clusters positively or negatively associated with aspiration. Clusters were evaluated against biomarkers CXCL9, CXCL10, MCP1, FoxP3 and GranzymeB. Results Bile acid aspiration was associated with a distinct metabolomic profile resolved using 3 bioinformatics approaches with a bias of increased small species in the bile positive samples, suggesting an increase in pulmonary permeability with aspiration. Presence of bile only weakly correlated with the other omic markers of injury (r .17-.26, p .09-.2). Individual bile acid associated clusters showed significant positive and negative correlation with known other markers of injury. Conclusions In this discovery phase study there is a strong association between metabolomic features of bile acid aspiration and known biomarkers of injury from other omic platforms. This strengthens the claim that aspiration of gastric contents is dangerous and also provides an avenue for risk stratification in a prospective cohort of patients. Meeting33rd Annual Meeting and Scientific Sessions of the International-Society-for-Heart-and-Lung-Transplantation LocationMontreal, CANADA DateAPR 24-27, 2013 SponsorInt Soc Heart & Lung Transplantat
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