Sub-phenotypes of pneumonia defined by pulmonary histopathological features.

Journal: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
Published Date:

Abstract

Establishing sub-phenotypes of pneumonia based on distinct host processes will be a step towards using host-directed therapies (to complement microbe-directed therapies) more rationally and precisely. Although pneumonia is a pulmonary pathophysiology, histological changes within the lungs have not been leveraged for sub-phenotyping. We addressed this by scoring 18 histopathology features (e.g., type 2 cell hyperplasia or necrosis) across rapid autopsy lung samples from 276 elderly subjects with pneumonia. Machine learning algorithms segregated subjects into seven different sub-phenotypes of pneumonia with distinct histopathology signatures. Quantitative immunofluorescence demonstrated associations of macrophages, neutrophils, T cells, and B cells with select histology features and pulmonary pathology sub-phenotypes. Mouse models revealed corollary sub-phenotypes, although some histology features observed in human lungs were never observed in mice. By illuminating this spectrum of histopathologies and discriminating discrete sub-phenotypes of pneumonia, a foundational framework emerges for developing and using host-directed therapies for subsets of pneumonia patients.

Authors

  • Amulya Shastry
  • Bradley E Hiller
  • Nathan L Sanders
  • Anna E Tseng
  • Jeet Kothari
  • Aoife K O'Connell
  • Hans P Gertje
  • Catherine T Ha
  • Ekaterina Murzin
  • Katrina E Traber
  • James A Lederer
  • Mattthew R Jones
  • Florian Douam
  • Thomas G Beach
    Civin Laboratory for Neuropathology, Banner Sun Health Research Institute, Sun City, AZ, USA.
  • Daniel G Remick
  • Nicholas A Crossland
  • Stefano Monti
  • Joshua D Campbell
  • Joseph P Mizgerd

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