A Neutrophil Subset Defined by Intracellular Olfactomedin 4 is Associated with Mortality in Sepsis.

Sepsis is a heterogeneous syndrome clinically and biologically but biomarkers of distinct host response pathways for early prognostic information and testing targeted treatments are lacking. We hypothesized that Olfactomedin 4 (OLFM4), a matrix glycoprotein of neutrophil specific granules defines a distinct neutrophil subset that may be an independent risk factor for poor outcomes in sepsis. In a single-center, prospective cohort study, we enrolled adults admitted to an academic medical center from the Emergency Department (ED) with suspected sepsis (identified by 2 or greater Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome [SIRS] criteria and antibiotic receipt) from March 2016 through December 2017, followed by sepsis adjudication according to Sepsis-3. We collected 200mL of whole blood within 24 hours of admission and stained for the neutrophil surface marker CD66b followed by intracellular staining for OLFM4 quantitated by flow cytometry. The predictor for 60-day mortality was the percentage of OLFM4+ neutrophils and at a cut-point of OLFM4+ ≥37.6% determined by the Youden Index. Of 120 enrolled patients with suspected sepsis, 97 had sepsis and 23 had non-sepsis SIRS. The mean percentage of OLFM4+ neutrophils was significantly increased in both sepsis and non-sepsis SIRS patients who died (P ≤ 0.01). Among sepsis patients with elevated OLFM4+(≥37.6%), 56% died compared to 18% with OLFM4+ <37.6% (P=0.001).The association between OLFM4+ and mortality withstood adjustment for demographics, co-morbidities and measures of severity of illness (P<0.03). In sepsis, OLFM4+ neutrophil percentage is independently associated with 60-day mortality and may represent a novel measure of the heterogeneity of host response to sepsis.

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