Literature DB >> 22686201

Proteomics improves the prediction of burns mortality: results from regression spline modeling.

Celeste C Finnerty1, Hyunsu Ju, Heidi Spratt, Sundar Victor, Marc G Jeschke, Sachin Hegde, Suresh K Bhavnani, Bruce A Luxon, Allan R Brasier, David N Herndon.   

Abstract

Prediction of mortality in severely burned patients remains unreliable. Although clinical covariates and plasma protein abundance have been used with varying degrees of success, the triad of burn size, inhalation injury, and age remains the most reliable predictor. We investigated the effect of combining proteomics variables with these three clinical covariates on prediction of mortality in burned children. Serum samples were collected from 330 burned children (burns covering >25% of the total body surface area) between admission and the time of the first operation for clinical chemistry analyses and proteomic assays of cytokines. Principal component analysis revealed that serum protein abundance and the clinical covariates each provided independent information regarding patient survival. To determine whether combining proteomics with clinical variables improves prediction of patient mortality, we used multivariate adaptive regression splines, because the relationships between analytes and mortality were not linear. Combining these factors increased overall outcome prediction accuracy from 52% to 81% and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve from 0.82 to 0.95. Thus, the predictive accuracy of burns mortality is substantially improved by combining protein abundance information with clinical covariates in a multivariate adaptive regression splines classifier, a model currently being validated in a prospective study.
© 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22686201      PMCID: PMC3375614          DOI: 10.1111/j.1752-8062.2012.00412.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Transl Sci        ISSN: 1752-8054            Impact factor:   4.689


  16 in total

1.  Serum cytokine differences in severely burned children with and without sepsis.

Authors:  Celeste C Finnerty; David N Herndon; David L Chinkes; Marc G Jeschke
Journal:  Shock       Date:  2007-01       Impact factor: 3.454

2.  Burn incidence and medical care use in the United States: estimates, trends, and data sources.

Authors:  P A Brigham; E McLoughlin
Journal:  J Burn Care Rehabil       Date:  1996 Mar-Apr

3.  Generalized additive models for medical research.

Authors:  T Hastie; R Tibshirani
Journal:  Stat Methods Med Res       Date:  1995-09       Impact factor: 3.021

4.  Cytokine expression profile over time in severely burned pediatric patients.

Authors:  Celeste C Finnerty; David N Herndon; Rene Przkora; Clifford T Pereira; Hermes M Oliveira; Dulciene M M Queiroz; Andreia M C Rocha; Marc G Jeschke
Journal:  Shock       Date:  2006-07       Impact factor: 3.454

5.  A comparison of regression trees, logistic regression, generalized additive models, and multivariate adaptive regression splines for predicting AMI mortality.

Authors:  Peter C Austin
Journal:  Stat Med       Date:  2007-07-10       Impact factor: 2.373

6.  Prediction of mortality from catastrophic burns in children.

Authors:  Marcus Spies; David N Herndon; Judah I Rosenblatt; Arthur P Sanford; Steven E Wolf
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2003-03-22       Impact factor: 79.321

7.  Effect of inhalation injury, burn size, and age on mortality: a study of 1447 consecutive burn patients.

Authors:  D L Smith; B A Cairns; F Ramadan; J S Dalston; S M Fakhry; R Rutledge; A A Meyer; H D Peterson
Journal:  J Trauma       Date:  1994-10

8.  The influence of inhalation injury and pneumonia on burn mortality.

Authors:  K Z Shirani; B A Pruitt; A D Mason
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1987-01       Impact factor: 12.969

9.  Combining early coagulation and inflammatory status improves prediction of mortality in burned and nonburned trauma patients.

Authors:  Myung S Park; Jose Salinas; Charles E Wade; Jingjing Wang; Wenjun Martini; Anthony E Pusateri; Gerald A Merrill; Kevin Chung; Steven E Wolf; John B Holcomb
Journal:  J Trauma       Date:  2008-02

10.  Inhalation injury in severely burned children does not augment the systemic inflammatory response.

Authors:  Celeste C Finnerty; David N Herndon; Marc G Jeschke
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 9.097

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  9 in total

Review 1.  Early detection of pneumonia as a risk factor for mortality in burn patients in Menoufiya University Hospitals, Egypt.

Authors:  M Mgahed; R El-Helbawy; A Omar; H El-Meselhy; R Abd El-Halim
Journal:  Ann Burns Fire Disasters       Date:  2013-09-30

2.  The P50 Research Center in Perioperative Sciences: How the investment by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences in team science has reduced postburn mortality.

Authors:  Celeste C Finnerty; Karel D Capek; Charles Voigt; Gabriel Hundeshagen; Janos Cambiaso-Daniel; Craig Porter; Linda E Sousse; Amina El Ayadi; Ramon Zapata-Sirvent; Ashley N Guillory; Oscar E Suman; David N Herndon
Journal:  J Trauma Acute Care Surg       Date:  2017-09       Impact factor: 3.313

3.  Metabolomics and Precision Medicine in Trauma: The State of the Field.

Authors:  Sudha P Jayaraman; Rahul J Anand; Jonathan H DeAntonio; Martin Mangino; Michel B Aboutanos; Vigneshwar Kasirajan; Rao R Ivatury; Alex B Valadka; Olena Glushakova; Ronald L Hayes; Lorin M Bachmann; Gretchen M Brophy; Daniel Contaifer; Urszula O Warncke; Donald F Brophy; Dayanjan S Wijesinghe
Journal:  Shock       Date:  2018-07       Impact factor: 3.454

4.  Long-Term Administration of Oxandrolone Improves Lung Function in Pediatric Burned Patients.

Authors:  Linda E Sousse; David N Herndon; Ronald P Mlcak; Jong O Lee; Clark R Andersen; Andrew J Zovath; Celeste C Finnerty; Oscar E Suman
Journal:  J Burn Care Res       Date:  2016 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 1.845

5.  Can we use C-reactive protein levels to predict severe infection or sepsis in severely burned patients?

Authors:  Marc G Jeschke; Celeste C Finnerty; Gabriela A Kulp; Robert Kraft; David N Herndon
Journal:  Int J Burns Trauma       Date:  2013-07-08

Review 6.  Targeted proteomics for biomarker discovery and validation of hepatocellular carcinoma in hepatitis C infected patients.

Authors:  Gul M Mustafa; Denner Larry; John R Petersen; Cornelis J Elferink
Journal:  World J Hepatol       Date:  2015-06-08

7.  Survivors versus nonsurvivors postburn: differences in inflammatory and hypermetabolic trajectories.

Authors:  Marc G Jeschke; Gerd G Gauglitz; Celeste C Finnerty; Robert Kraft; Ronald P Mlcak; David N Herndon
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  2014-04       Impact factor: 12.969

Review 8.  Burn injury.

Authors:  Marc G Jeschke; Margriet E van Baar; Mashkoor A Choudhry; Kevin K Chung; Nicole S Gibran; Sarvesh Logsetty
Journal:  Nat Rev Dis Primers       Date:  2020-02-13       Impact factor: 52.329

Review 9.  The diagnostic and prognostic value of systems biology research in major traumatic and thermal injury: a review.

Authors:  Jon Hazeldine; Peter Hampson; Janet M Lord
Journal:  Burns Trauma       Date:  2016-09-21
  9 in total

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