Table of contentsP001 - Sepsis impairs the capillary response within hypoxic capillaries and decreases erythrocyte oxygen-dependent ATP effluxR. M. Bateman, M. D. Sharpe, J. E. Jagger, C. G. EllisP002 - Lower serum immunoglobulin G2 level does not predispose to severe flu.J. Solé-Violán, M. López-Rodríguez, E. Herrera-Ramos, J. Ruíz-Hernández, L. Borderías, J. Horcajada, N. González-Quevedo, O. Rajas, M. Briones, F. Rodríguez de Castro, C. Rodríguez GallegoP003 - Brain protective effects of intravenous immunoglobulin through inhibition of complement activation and apoptosis in a rat model of sepsisF. Esen, G. Orhun, P. Ergin Ozcan, E. Senturk, C. Ugur Yilmaz, N. Orhan, N. Arican, M. Kaya, M. Kucukerden, M. Giris, U. Akcan, S. Bilgic Gazioglu, E. TuzunP004 - Adenosine a1 receptor dysfunction is associated with leukopenia: A possible mechanism for sepsis-induced leukopeniaR. Riff, O. Naamani, A. DouvdevaniP005 - Analysis of neutrophil by hyper spectral imaging - A preliminary reportR. Takegawa, H. Yoshida, T. Hirose, N. Yamamoto, H. Hagiya, M. Ojima, Y. Akeda, O. Tasaki, K. Tomono, T. ShimazuP006 - Chemiluminescent intensity assessed by eaa predicts the incidence of postoperative infectious complications following gastrointestinal surgeryS. Ono, T. Kubo, S. Suda, T. Ueno, T. IkedaP007 - Serial change of c1 inhibitor in patients with sepsis – A prospective observational studyT. Hirose, H. Ogura, H. Takahashi, M. Ojima, J. Kang, Y. Nakamura, T. Kojima, T. ShimazuP008 - Comparison of bacteremia and sepsis on sepsis related biomarkersT. Ikeda, S. Suda, Y. Izutani, T. Ueno, S. OnoP009 - The changes of procalcitonin levels in critical patients with abdominal septic shock during blood purificationT. Taniguchi, M. OP010 - Validation of a new sensitive point of care device for rapid measurement of procalcitoninC. Dinter, J. Lotz, B. Eilers, C. Wissmann, R. LottP011 - Infection biomarkers in primary care patients with acute respiratory tract infections – Comparison of procalcitonin and C-reactive proteinM. M. Meili, P. S. SchuetzP012 - Do we need a lower procalcitonin cut off?H. Hawa, M. Sharshir, M. Aburageila, N. SalahuddinP013 - The predictive role of C-reactive protein and procalcitonin biomarkers in central nervous system infections with extensively drug resistant bacteriaV. Chantziara, S. Georgiou, A. Tsimogianni, P. Alexandropoulos, A. Vassi, F. Lagiou, M. Valta, G. Micha, E. Chinou, G. MichaloudisP014 - Changes in endotoxin activity assay and procalcitonin levels after direct hemoperfusion with polymyxin-b immobilized fiberA. Kodaira, T. Ikeda, S. Ono, T. Ueno, S. Suda, Y. Izutani, H. ImaizumiP015 - Diagnostic usefullness of combination biomarkers on ICU admissionM. V. De la Torre-Prados, A. Garcia-De la Torre, A. Enguix-Armada, A. Puerto-Morlan, V. Perez-Valero, A. Garcia-AlcantaraP016 - Platelet function analysis utilising the PFA-100 does not predict infection, bacteraemia, sepsis or outcome in critically ill patientsN. Bolton, J. Dudziak, S. Bonney, A. Tridente, P. NeeP017 - Extracellular histone H3 levels are in...
RATIONALE: Striking class I HLA risk associations and CD8+ T cell dependency have been described for both Stevens-Johnson Syndrome/ toxic epidermal necrolysis (SJS/TEN) and abacavir hypersensitivity (AHS). However, distinct clinical phenotypes and positive predictive values (55% for HLA-B*57:01 restricted AHS and <8% for all HLA risk alleles and SJS/TEN) highlight key mechanistic differences. METHODS: Single cell technologies including T-cell receptor ab sequencing, multi-parameter flow cytometry, full transcriptome RNAseq, and mass cytometry were used to define the clonality and molecular signatures of pathogenic drug-specific T cells from paired PBMC, blister fluid, and acute, recovery, and patch test positive skin in SJS/TEN and AHS (n525). RESULTS: Dominant CD8+ T-cell clonotypes of effector memory phenotype (CCR7-) with variable expression of skin homing/residence markers (CLA, CD103) were seen in SJS/TEN skin and blister fluid and were present at much lower frequency in both acute and drug-stimulated recovery peripheral blood. A public TCR was dominant in blister fluid of HLA-B*15:02 restricted carbamazepine-SJS/TEN. For allopurinol SJS/ TEN, a dominant clonotype was identified in HLA-B*58:01+ blister fluid and a novel HLA class I restriction was identified with striking T-cell clonality (>97%) in blister fluid and skin. In contrast, for AHS, abacavir responsive CD8+ T cells with shared TCR clonotypes were isolated from the peripheral blood and positive patch tests that were polyclonal. CONCLUSIONS: Single cell approaches that define the signatures of drug-specific T cells in the skin and peripheral blood highlight mechanistic differences between HLA class I restricted drug hypersensitivity syndromes and will help drive the development of targeted therapeutics and screening approaches. 281 The increased risk of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and Clostridium difficile in patients with a documented penicillin allergy
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