| Literature DB >> 34099729 |
Jie Lu1, Ping Li1, Ke Ma1, Yang Li1, Hui Yuan1, Junming Zhu1, Weixun Duan2, Jingsong Ou3, Yonghong Huang4, Long Wu5, Xueliang Pan6, Hui Zhang7, Jie Du8, Yulin Li9.
Abstract
Following hospital discharge, patients with type A acute aortic dissection (TA-AAD) may present an increase in mortality risk. However, little is known about specific biomarkers associated with post-discharge survival, and there is a paucity of prognostic markers associated with TA-AAD. Here, we identify nine candidate proteins specific for patietns with TA-AAD in a cross-sectional dataset by unbiased protein screening and in-depth bioinformatic analyses. In addition, we explore their association with short-term and long-term mortality in a derivation cohort of patients with TA-AAD, including an internal (n = 300) and external (n = 236) dataset. An elevated osteoprotegerin (OPG)/tumour necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) ratio was the strongest predictor of overall, 30-day, post-30-day mortality in both datasets and was confirmed to be a strong predictor of mortality in an independent validation cohort (n = 400). Based on OPG/TRAIL ratio-guided risk stratification, patients at high risk (>33) had a higher 1-year mortality (55.6% vs. 4.3%; 68.2% vs. 2.6%) than patients at low risk (<4) in both cohorts. In Conclusion, we show that an elevated OPG/TRAIL ratio is associated with a significant increase in short-term and long-term mortality in patients with TA-AAD.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34099729 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23787-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919