Serum GSDMD for Early Diagnosis of Bloodstream Infection and Differentiating Bacterial from Fungal Infections.

Jing Huang,Jing Shi,Xiuyu Zhang, Feng Tian, Juan Huang, Qing Zhao, Ningyi Wan, Lijun Zhang, Ying Hu,Pu Li

The Journal of infectious diseases(2024)

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摘要
BACKGROUND:The role of Gasdermin D (GSDMD) in bloodstream infection (BSI) diagnosis is unknown. METHODS:Serum GSDMD levels were measured in BSI patients. Endothelial cells and PBMCs were isolated, infected with bacteria/fungi, and intracellular/extracellular GSDMD concentrations were measured. An animal model was established to investigate the association between serum GSDMD levels and BSI incidence/progression. RESULTS:ROC curve analysis indicated that GSDMD could be a potential early diagnostic biomarker for BSI (AUC = 0.9885). Combining GSDMD with procalcitonin (PCT) improved the differential diagnosis of Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria (AUC = 0.6699, 66.15% specificity), and early diagnosis of Gram-positive bacteria (98.46% sensitivity), while PCT was not significantly elevated. The combined GSDMD and G-test had higher sensitivity (AUC = 0.7174) for differential diagnosis of bacterial and fungal infections, and early detection of fungal infections (98.44% sensitivity). In vitro and in vivo experiments confirmed that GSDMD levels increased significantly within 2 hours, peaked at 16 hours, and exhibited a time-dependent upward trend. CONCLUSIONS:Serum GSDMD, alone or combined with other biomarkers, has potential for early diagnosis and differential diagnosis of BSI caused by various pathogens. This finding offers a new strategy for early detection and treatment of BSI.
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