March 15, 2013
Journal Article

DETERMINATION OF BURN PATIENT OUTCOME BY LARGE-SCALE QUANTITATIVE DISCOVERY PROTEOMICS

Abstract

Objective: Emerging proteomics techniques can be used to establish proteomic outcome signatures and to identify candidate biomarkers for survival following traumatic injury. We applied high-resolution liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) and multiplex cytokine analysis to profile the plasma proteome of survivors and non-survivors of massive burn injury to determine the proteomic survival signature following a major burn injury. Design: Proteomic discovery study. Setting: Five burn hospitals across the U.S. Patients: Thirty-two burn patients (16 non-survivors and 16 survivors), 19–89 years of age, were admitted within 96 h of injury to the participating hospitals with burns covering >20% of the total body surface area and required at least one surgical intervention. Interventions: None. Measurements and Main Results: We found differences in circulating levels of 43 proteins involved in the acute phase response, hepatic signaling, the complement cascade, inflammation, and insulin resistance. Thirty-two of the proteins identified were not previously known to play a role in the response to burn. IL-4, IL-8, GM-CSF, MCP-1, and ß2-microglobulin correlated well with survival and may serve as clinical biomarkers. Conclusions: These results demonstrate the utility of these techniques for establishing proteomic survival signatures and for use as a discovery tool to identify candidate biomarkers for survival. This is the first clinical application of a high-throughput, large-scale LC-MS-based quantitative plasma proteomic approach for biomarker discovery applied to the prediction of patient outcome following burn, trauma or critical illness.

Revised: June 5, 2013 | Published: March 15, 2013

Citation

Finnerty C.C., M.G. Jeschke, W. Qian, A. Kaushal, W. Xiao, T. Liu, and M.A. Gritsenko, et al. 2013. DETERMINATION OF BURN PATIENT OUTCOME BY LARGE-SCALE QUANTITATIVE DISCOVERY PROTEOMICS. Critical Care Medicine 41, no. 6:1421-1434. PNWD-SA-9845. doi:10.1097/CCM.0b013e31827c072e