Genetic Variation in Complement Component 2 of the Classical Complement Pathway is Associated With Increased Mortality and Infection: A Study of 627 Patients With Trauma

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Abstract

Background:

Trauma is a disease of inflammation. Complement Component 2 (C2) is a protease involved in activation of complement through the classical pathway and has been implicated in a variety of chronic inflammatory diseases. We hypothesized that genetic variation in C2 (E318D) identifies a high-risk subgroup of patients with trauma reflecting increased mortality and infection (ventilator-associated pneumonia [VAP]). Consequently, genetic variation in C2 may stratify patient risk and illuminate underlying mechanisms for therapeutic intervention.

Methods:

DNA samples from 702 patients with trauma were genotyped for C2 E318D and linked with covariates (age: mean 42.8 years, gender: 74% male, ethnicity: 80% white, mechanism: 84% blunt, injury severity score: mean 25.0, admission lactate: mean 3.13 mEq/L) and outcomes: mortality 9.9% and VAP: 18.5%. VAP was defined by quantitative bronchoalveolar lavage (>104). Multivariate regression analysis determined the relationship of genotype and covariates to risk of death and VAP. However, patients with injury severity score ≥45 were excluded from the multivariate analysis, as magnitude of injury overwhelms genetics and covariates in determining outcome.

Results:

Fifty-two patients (8.3%) had the high-risk heterozygous genotype, associated with a significant increase in mortality and VAP.

Conclusion:

In 702 patients with trauma, 8.3% had a high-risk genetic variation in C2 associated with increased mortality (odds ratio = 2.65) and infection (odds ratio = 2.00). This variation: (1) identifies a previously unknown high-risk group for infection and mortality; (2) can be determined at admission; (3) may provide opportunity for early therapeutic intervention; and (4) requires validation in a distinct cohort of patients.

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