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Targeting Procalcitonin Protects Vascular Barrier Integrity.

Laura BrabenecMelanie MüllerKatharina E M HellenthalOle S KarstenHeorhii PryvalovMandy OttoAnna HolthenrichAnna Lívia Linard MatosRaphael WeissSebastian KintrupMichael HesslerAngelo Dell'AquilaKatharina ThomasJohannes NaßAndreas MargrafAstrid F NottebaumJan RossaintAlexander ZarbockDietmar VestweberVolker GerkeNana-Maria Wagner
Published in: American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine (2022)
Rationale: Capillary leakage frequently occurs during sepsis and after major surgery and is associated with microvascular dysfunction and adverse outcome. Procalcitonin is a well-established biomarker in inflammation without known impact on vascular integrity. Objectives: We determined how procalcitonin induces endothelial hyperpermeability and how targeting procalcitonin protects vascular barrier integrity. Methods: In a prospective observational clinical study, procalcitonin levels were assessed in 50 patients who underwent cardiac surgery and correlated to postoperative fluid and vasopressor requirements along with sublingual microvascular functionality. Effects of the procalcitonin signaling pathway on endothelial barrier and adherens junctional integrity were characterized in vitro and verified in mice. Inhibition of procalcitonin activation by dipeptidyl-peptidase 4 (DPP4) was evaluated in murine polymicrobial sepsis and clinically verified in cardiac surgery patients chronically taking the DPP4 inhibitor sitagliptin. Measurements and Main Results: Elevated postoperative procalcitonin levels identified patients with 2-fold increased fluid requirements ( P  < 0.01), 1.8-fold higher vasopressor demand ( P  < 0.05), and compromised microcirculation (reduction to 63.5 ± 2.8% of perfused vessels, P  < 0.05). Procalcitonin induced 1.4-fold endothelial and 2.3-fold pulmonary capillary permeability (both P s < 0.001) by destabilizing VE-cadherin. Procalcitonin effects were dependent on activation by DPP4, and targeting the procalcitonin receptor or DPP4 during sepsis-induced hyperprocalcitonemia reduced capillary leakage by 54 ± 10.1% and 60.4 ± 6.9% (both P s < 0.01), respectively. Sitagliptin before cardiac surgery was associated with augmented microcirculation (74.1 ± 1.7% vs. 68.6 ± 1.9% perfused vessels in non-sitagliptin-medicated patients, P  < 0.05) and with 2.3-fold decreased fluid ( P  < 0.05) and 1.8-fold reduced vasopressor demand postoperatively ( P  < 0.05). Conclusions: Targeting procalcitonin's action on the endothelium is a feasible means to preserve vascular integrity during systemic inflammation associated with hyperprocalcitonemia.
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