Low Low-Density Lipoprotein Levels Are Associated With, But Do Not Causally Contribute to, Increased Mortality in Sepsis
- PMID: 30394916
- DOI: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000003551
Low Low-Density Lipoprotein Levels Are Associated With, But Do Not Causally Contribute to, Increased Mortality in Sepsis
Abstract
Objectives: Low low-density lipoprotein levels are associated with increased mortality in sepsis. Whether low low-density lipoprotein levels contribute causally to adverse sepsis outcome is unknown.
Design: Retrospective analysis of two sepsis patient cohorts using a Mendelian Randomization strategy.
Setting: Sepsis patients enrolled into clinical research cohorts at tertiary care teaching hospitals.
Patients: The first cohort included 200 sepsis patients enrolled in an observational study in a hospital Emergency Department. The second cohort included genotyped patients enrolled in the Vasopressin and Septic Shock Trial.
Interventions: Retrospective analysis of these patient datasets. In 632 patients enrolled in Vasopressin and Septic Shock Trial, Proprotein Convertase Subtilisin/Kexin type 9, and 3-Hydroxy-3-Methylglutaryl-CoA Reductase single nucleotide polymorphisms known to be associated with low-density lipoprotein levels were genotyped, and a genetic score related to low-density lipoprotein levels was calculated.
Measurements and main results: In the first cohort, we replicated the finding that low low-density lipoprotein levels are associated with increased 28-day mortality. In genotyped patients in the Vasopressin and Septic Shock Trial trial, we found that the 3-Hydroxy-3-Methylglutaryl-CoA Reductase genetic score, known to be directly related to low low-density lipoprotein levels, was not associated with increased mortality. Surprisingly the Proprotein Convertase Subtilisin/Kexin type 9 genetic score, known to be directly related to low low-density lipoprotein levels, was associated with decreased (not increased) mortality.
Conclusions: Both 3-Hydroxy-3-Methylglutaryl-CoA Reductase and Proprotein Convertase Subtilisin/Kexin type 9 genetic scores should have been associated with increased mortality if low low-density lipoprotein levels contributed causally to sepsis mortality. But this was not the case, and the opposite was observed for the Proprotein Convertase Subtilisin/Kexin type 9 genetic score. This suggests that low-density lipoprotein levels, per se, do not contribute causally to adverse sepsis outcomes. The Proprotein Convertase Subtilisin/Kexin type 9 genetic score finding raises the possibility that increased low-density lipoprotein clearance (the effect of these Proprotein Convertase Subtilisin/Kexin type 9 genotypes) may contribute to improved sepsis outcomes.
Comment in
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Proprotein Convertase Subtilisin/Kexin Type 9 Inhibition and Survival in Sepsis: Causal Inference Through Human Genetics.Crit Care Med. 2019 Mar;47(3):489-491. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000003609. Crit Care Med. 2019. PMID: 30768512 No abstract available.
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