期刊
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY AND LABORATORY MEDICINE
卷 60, 期 11, 页码 1855-1858出版社
WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/cclm-2022-0473
关键词
abnormal glycosylation; Streptococcus pneumoniae sepsis; urinary free sialic acid
By retrospectively reviewing clinical records of a group of patients with Streptococcus pneumoniae sepsis, we found that the infection could lead to elevated levels of urine free sialic acid (UFSA). This research expands our knowledge of UFSA as a biomarker in human disease and suggests that infections with organisms possessing neuraminidase activity should be considered in patients with unexplained increases in UFSA.
Objectives Urine free sialic acid (UFSA) is an important diagnostic biomarker for sialuria (GNE variants) and infantile sialic acid storage disease/Salla disease (SLC17A5 variants). Traditionally, UFSA has been measured using specific single-plex methodology in relatively small cohorts of patients with clinical symptoms suggestive of these disorders. The use of multiplex tandem mass spectrometry urine screening (UMSMS) has meant that UFSA can be measured semi-quantitatively in a much larger cohort of patients being investigated for suspected metabolic disorders. We hypothesised that the neuraminidase of Streptococcus pneumoniae may release free sialic acid from endogenous sialylated glycoconjugates and result in increased UFSA levels. Methods We conducted a retrospective review of clinical records of patients who were identified as having S. pneumoniae infection and who also had UMSMS at the time of their acute infection. Results We identified three cases of increased UFSA detected by UMSMS screening that were secondary to S. pneumoniae sepsis. Additional testing ruled out genetic causes of increased UFSA in the first patient. All three patients had overwhelming sepsis with multiorgan dysfunction which was fatal. Glycosylation abnormalities consistent with the removal of sialic acid were demonstrated in serum transferrin patterns in one patient. Conclusions We have demonstrated in a retrospective cohort that elevation of UFSA levels have been observed in cases of S. pneumoniae sepsis. This expands our knowledge of UFSA as a biomarker in human disease. This research demonstrates that infection with organisms with neuraminidase activity should be considered in patients with unexplained increases in UFSA.
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