Ferroptosis and Pyroptosis Signatures in Critical COVID-19 Patients
nature.comCritical COVID-19 patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) frequently suffer from severe multiple organ dysfunction with underlying widespread cell death.
Ferroptosis and pyroptosis are two detrimental forms of regulated cell death that could constitute new therapeutic targets. We enrolled 120 critical COVID-19 patients in a two-center prospective cohort study to monitor systemic markers of ferroptosis, iron dyshomeostasis, pyroptosis, pneumocyte cell death and cell damage on the first three consecutive days after ICU admission.
Plasma of 20 post-operative ICU patients (PO) and 39 healthy controls (HC) without organ failure served as controls. Subsets of COVID-19 patients displayed increases in individual biomarkers compared to controls.
Unsupervised clustering was used to discern latent clusters of COVID-19 patients based on biomarker profiles.
Pyroptosis-related interleukin-18 accompanied by high pneumocyte cell death was independently associated with higher odds at mechanical ventilation, while the subgroup with high interleuking-1 beta (but limited pneumocyte cell death) displayed reduced odds at mechanical ventilation and lower mortality hazard.