4.6 Article

Biological and Clinical Factors Contributing to the Metabolic Heterogeneity of Hospitalized Patients with and without COVID-19

期刊

CELLS
卷 10, 期 9, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells10092293

关键词

COVID-19; metabolomics; tryptophan; kynurenine; amino acid; fatty acid; acylcarnitine

资金

  1. National Institute of General and Medical Sciences [RM1GM131968]
  2. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [R01HL146442, R01HL149714, R01HL148151, R21HL150032]

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This large study analyzed metabolic features of COVID-19 patients and found significant changes in amino acid and fatty acid/acylcarnitine metabolism as relevant markers of disease severity, progression, and prognosis. Machine learning models achieved around 78% prediction accuracy when trained with metabolomics and clinical data from half of the patient cohort, providing a foundation for further research and data sharing opportunities.
The Corona Virus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic represents an ongoing worldwide challenge. The present large study sought to understand independent and overlapping metabolic features of samples from acutely ill patients (n = 831) that tested positive (n = 543) or negative (n = 288) for COVID-19. High-throughput metabolomics analyses were complemented with antigen and enzymatic activity assays on plasma from acutely ill patients collected while in the emergency department, at admission, or during hospitalization. Lipidomics analyses were also performed on COVID-19-positive or -negative subjects with the lowest and highest body mass index (n = 60/group). Significant changes in amino acid and fatty acid/acylcarnitine metabolism emerged as highly relevant markers of disease severity, progression, and prognosis as a function of biological and clinical variables in these patients. Further, machine learning models were trained by entering all metabolomics and clinical data from half of the COVID-19 patient cohort and then tested on the other half, yielding similar to 78% prediction accuracy. Finally, the extensive amount of information accumulated in this large, prospective, observational study provides a foundation for mechanistic follow-up studies and data sharing opportunities, which will advance our understanding of the characteristics of the plasma metabolism in COVID-19 and other acute critical illnesses.

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