Intestinal Injury in Ugandan Children Hospitalized with Malaria

Michelle Ngai, Michael T. Hawkes, Clara Erice, Andrea M. Weckman, Julie Wright, Veselina Stefanova, Robert O. Opoka, Sophie Namasopo, Andrea L. Conroy, Kevin C. Kain

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background. Severe malaria is associated with multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS), which may involve the gastrointestinal tract. Methods. In a prospective cohort study in Uganda, we measured markers of intestinal injury (intestinal fatty-acid binding protein [I-FABP] and zonula occludens-1 [ZO-1]) and microbial translocation (lipopolysaccharide binding protein [LBP] and soluble complement of differentiation 14 [sCD14]) among children admitted with malaria. We examined their association with biomarkers of inflammation, endothelial activation, clinical signs of hypoperfusion, organ injury, and mortality. Results. We enrolled 523 children (median age 1.5 years, 46% female, 7.5% mortality). Intestinal FABP was above the normal range (≥400 pg/mL) in 415 of 523 patients (79%). Intestinal FABP correlated with ZO-1 (ρ = 0.11, P = .014), sCD14 (ρ = 0.12, P = .0046) as well as markers of inflammation and endothelial activation. Higher I-FABP levels were associated with lower systolic blood pressure (ρ = −0.14, P = .0015), delayed capillary refill time (ρ = 0.17, P = .00011), higher lactate level (ρ = 0.40, P < .0001), increasing stage of acute kidney injury (ρ = 0.20, P = .0034), and coma (P < .0001). Admission I-FABP levels ≥5.6 ng/mL were associated with a 7.4-fold higher relative risk of in-hospital death (95% confidence interval, 1.4–11, P = .0016). Conclusions. Intestinal injury occurs commonly in children hospitalized with malaria and is associated with microbial translocation, systemic inflammation, tissue hypoperfusion, MODS, and fatal outcome.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2010-2020
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Infectious Diseases
Volume226
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • inflammation
  • intestinal injury
  • malaria
  • Uganda

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