Oxidative pathways in the subendothelial space activate pro-infl ammatory, immunogenic, and atherogenic processes, resulting in endothelial dysfunction, plaque growth and destabilization, platelet activation, and thrombosis, ultimately leading to clinical events ( 1 ). A variety of oxidation-specifi c epitopes (OSE) are generated during oxidative modifi cation of plaque components. These epitopes are not only expressed on modifi ed lipoproteins but also on apoptotic cells and proteins in the extracellular matrix of atherosclerotic vessels ( 2 ).Extensive experimental data exists defi ning the role of oxidation in both progression and regression of atherosclerosis. Atherosclerotic lesions of hypercholesterolemic animal models, which represent primarily early and intermediate stage atherosclerosis, contain signifi cant amounts of OSE, often in proportion to plaque burden. OSE in the vessel wall of atherosclerotic animals can also be imaged with nuclear and magnetic resonance techniques using murine and human oxidation-specifi c antibodies, such as MDA2, E06, and IK17 ( 3-5 ). Dietary interventions in hypercholesterolemic animals that promote regression result in more rapid removal of OSE than apoB, which occurs prior to plaques diminishing signifi cantly in size, and is associated with markers of plaque stabilization, such Abstract The relationships between oxidation-specifi c epitopes (OSE) and lipoprotein (a) [Lp(a)] and progressive atherosclerosis and plaque rupture have not been determined. Coronary artery sections from sudden death victims and carotid endarterectomy specimens were immunostained for apoB-100, oxidized phospholipids (OxPL), apo(a), malondialdehyde-lysine (MDA), and MDA-related epitopes detected by antibody IK17 and macrophage markers. The presence of OxPL captured in carotid and saphenous vein graft distal protection devices was determined with LC-MS/MS. In coronary arteries, OSE and apo(a) were absent in normal coronary arteries and minimally present in early lesions. As lesions progressed, apoB and MDA epitopes did not increase, whereas macrophage, apo(a), OxPL, and IK17 epitopes increased proportionally, but they differed according to plaque type and plaque components. Apo(a) epitopes were present throughout early and late lesions, especially in macrophages and the necrotic core. IK17 and OxPL epitopes were strongest in late lesions in macrophagerich areas, lipid pools, and the necrotic core, and they were most specifi cally associated with unstable and ruptured plaques. Specifi c OxPL were present in distal protection devices. Human atherosclerotic lesions manifest a differential expression of OSEs and apo(a) as they progress, rupture, and become clinically symptomatic.
Key Results 1. A model using baseline patient characteristics, laboratory markers, and chest radiography can predict short-term critical illness in hospitalized patients with COVID-19, with an internally validated AUC = 0.77. 2. At an example model risk threshold of 0.70, 71 of 356 patients would be predicted to develop critical illness of which 59 (83%) would be true-positives. 3. A risk calculator has been made available for download: Dutch COVID-19 risk model (https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1eFrdHxnOA-M_P-ijxnC2u30qk7IhMVV6YvHvJhrZ8Ws/edit#gid=0) (see Appendix E2).
BackgroundExperimental studies characterize adaptive immune response as a critical factor in the progression and complications of atherosclerosis. Yet, it is unclear whether these observations translate to the human situation. This study systematically evaluates cellular components of the adaptive immune response in a biobank of human aortas covering the full spectrum of atherosclerotic disease.Methods and ResultsA systematic analysis was performed on 114 well‐characterized perirenal aortic specimens with immunostaining for T‐cell subsets (CD3/4/8/45RA/45RO/FoxP3) and the Th1/non‐Th1/Th17 ratio (CD4+T‐bet+/CD4+T‐bet−/CD4+/interleukin‐17+ double staining). CD20 and CD138 were used to identify B cells and plasma cells, while B‐cell maturation was evaluated by AID/CD21 staining and expression of lymphoid homeostatic CXCL13. Scattered CD4 and CD8 cells with a T memory subtype were found in normal aorta and early, nonprogressive lesions. The total number of T cells increases in progressive atherosclerotic lesions (≈1:5 CD4/CD8 T‐cell ratio). A further increase in medial and adventitial T cells is found upon progression to vulnerable lesions.This critical stage is further hallmarked by de novo formation of adventitial lymphoidlike structures containing B cells and plasma cells, a process accompanied by transient expression of CXCL13. A dramatic reduction of T‐cell subsets, disappearance of lymphoid structures, and loss of CXCL13 expression characterize postruptured lesions. FoxP3 and Th17 T cells were minimally present throughout the atherosclerotic process.ConclusionsTransient CXCL13 expression, restricted presence of B cells in human atherosclerosis, along with formation of nonfunctional extranodal lymphoid structures in the phase preceding plaque rupture, indicates a “critical” change in the inflammatory footprint before and during plaque destabilization.
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