7-day longitudinal proteomics of critically ill patients: a pilot study
摘要
An adult’s health, indicated by measurable parameters, is stable over time. With the exception of circadian rhythms, variability in these parameters typically does not exceed 20%. In this pilot study, we looked into the stability of proteome in intensive care unit (ICU) patients. This was a single-center, prospective, observational pilot study of blood plasma from adult ICU patients with statistically heterogeneous patterns of clinically observed parameters. Eight week-long batches from seven patients (one patient participated twice) were analyzed by means of bottom-up proteomics. The data were analyzed with MaxQuant software against reference proteome. The obtained intensities were further processed with in-house R and Python scripts. In total, 218 proteins were identified; however, only 68 proteins appeared in all samples from all patients. Most proteins remained stable within observation (within-patient variance was less than 30%). The random-effects model also confirmed high impact of within-patient variance on the protein levels. The effects of time on the protein level variances did not exceed 5%. Z-score-based hierarchical clustering analysis revealed that the daily data of each patient were clustered together indicating that the plasma proteome of ICU patients both bears individual traits and remains stable during short-term progression of the patients’ condition. Therefore, in this pilot group of patients, the analysis over seven consecutive days fails to reveal proteome dynamics.