ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Comparison of the Proteome in ICU Patients in Search for TRALI Biomarkers: A Case-control Study Using Both Retrospective and Prospective Samples (CURIE)

A

Academisch Medisch Centrum - Universiteit van Amsterdam (AMC-UvA)

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Transfusion-Related Acute Lung Injury
ARDS, Human

Treatments

Other: Blood sample collection

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) is a severe complication of blood transfusions. After a transfusion, TRALI develops in 0.08-15% of cases depending on the characteristics of the studied population. Due to preventive measures the incidence has decreased. However, the incidence of TRALI is 50-100 times higher in critically ill patients compared to the general hospital population. Since the absolute incidence of respiratory transfusion complications is low and TRALI is under-diagnosed and - reported, to this date is has not been possible to elucidate the exact pathophysiology of TRALI. Consequently, no biomarkers are yet known to detect TRALI. This study aims to identify TRALI biomarkers, gain insight in cellular pathways underlying TRALI development and the role of neutrophils and regulatory T cells, which could enhance transfusion safety.

Full description

Objective of the study:

  • To identify biomarkers specific for TRALI, thus aiding in future diagnostics of TRALI.
  • To investigate the proteome in TRALI patients and thus gain knowledge on TRALI pathophysiology. This knowledge can be used to investigate preventive measures and therapy for TRALI.
  • To investigate the role of neutrophils and regulatory T cells in TRALI, which are thought to be essential dysregulated in the in TRALI pathogenesis.

Study design:

Case-control study using retrospective and prospective samples. Samples available from known TRALI patients stored at Sanquin Blood Bank will be compared to samples from intensive care patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), pneumonia, or without lung injury and to samples of healthy volunteers. The treating physician will screen ICU patients for eligibility for one of our groups and asks for permission to be approached by a researcher for informed consent. After obtaining informed consent, patients will be allocated to a group depending on whether they need a transfusion. After admission and informed consent extra blood samples (30ml) will be drawn from patients within 24 hours of arrival.

For Group 1 (patients who receive a transfusion but do not have lung injury), Group 2 (patients who receive a transfusion and have indirect ARDS), and Group 3 (patients who receive a transfusion with pneumonia (local lung injury)) a second tube blood sample (30ml) will be drawn 12 hours after the first transfusion. We will collect two samples (max 60 mL) for this group to analyze the effect of transfusion on the proteome. Together with the clinical data we will search for TRALI biomarkers.

Study population:

Adult intensive care patient who are admitted with:

Pneumonia (without ARDS), indirect ARDS or no pulmonary injury with and wihtout receiving a blood transfusion.

Healthy volunteers obtained through the Sanquin donor system. The TRALI samples that are obtained through hemovigilance at Sanquin (see protocol 4.1).

Primary study parameters/outcome of the study:

The primary endpoint of this study is to identify TRALI-specific biomarkers by comparing plasma proteomic profiles between the following groups: TRALI patients, indirect ARDS patients (with and without transfusion), pneumonia patients (with and without transfusion), and healthy volunteers. To isolate the impact of transfusion on the proteome and differentiate it from TRALI-specific changes, we will also analyze proteomic profiles before and after transfusion in relevant groups. This approach aims to increase the specificity and sensitivity of identified protein biomarkers for accurate TRALI diagnosis and facilitate the development of novel diagnostic assays.

Secundary study parameters/outcome of the study (if applicable):

The secundary outcomes of this study are:

  1. Characterizing the TRALI Proteome: we will perform in-depth characterization of the proteome in TRALI patients to gain a comprehensive understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying TRALI pathophysiology. This analysis aims to uncover potential therapeutic targets and pathways involved in TRALI development.
  2. Investigating Neutrophil and Treg responses: we will investigate the phenotype, activation status, and functional responses of neutrophils and Tregs in TRALI patients compared to relevant control groups. This detailed analysis will shed light on the roles of neutrophils and Tregs in TRALI pathogenesis.

Enrollment

210 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria

Patients on the ICU:

  1. Without lung injury who received a red blood cell (RBC) or platelet transfusion (PLT).
  2. With indirect ARDS with and without a blood transfusion (RBC or PLT);
  3. With pneumonia, with and without a blood transfusion (RBC or PLT).

Exclusion criteria

  1. "Objection to registration of data for scientific use" as noted in the patient file.
  2. Patients in whom it is impossible to obtain blood samples.
  3. Patients with massive hemorrhage.
  4. Patients with ARDS due to multiple transfusions.

Trial design

210 participants in 6 patient groups

ICU patients who receive a transfusion without lung injury
Description:
Purpose: This group is critical for comparing the baseline effects of blood transfusion on the proteome in critically ill patients who do not develop lung injury Following transfusion, providing a control to differentiate between transfusion-related changes in the blood composition and the specific lung injury observed in TRALI. Understanding these changes will help identify biomarkers and mechanisms exclusive to TRALI. Research question: How do transfusion-related proteomic changes manifest in ICU patients who do not develop lung injury after transfusion, and how does this baseline differ from the proteomics of TRALI patients?
Treatment:
Other: Blood sample collection
ICU patients who receive a transfusion and have indirect ARDS
Description:
Purpose: By excluding patients with ARDS due to a pulmonary cause, this group isolates systemic, non-pulmonary factors that trigger lung injury from local pulmonary responses. Comparing this with TRALI helps us pinpoint unique biomarkers and understand the role of plasma proteins and various cellular-pathways dealing with systemic inflammation with concomitant lung injury. Research question: What distinct proteomic profiles and cellular pathways in non-pulmonary ARDS are observed in comparison with TRALI?
Treatment:
Other: Blood sample collection
ICU patients who receive a transfusion and have infectious pneumonia
Description:
Purpose: Since both TRALI and pneumonia involve lung injury, understanding the differences in these responses will provide insight into the mechanisms responsible for lung inflammation in TRALI, distinguishing it from the lung inflammation caused by local pulmonary infection. Research question: Can we differentiate between the immune and proteomic responses in localized infectious lung injury and transfusion-induced TRALI, exposing how the immune system reacts to an infection versus a transfusion event?
Treatment:
Other: Blood sample collection
ICU patients without transfusion and with indirect ARDS
Description:
Purpose: This group allows us to characterize the proteomic and immunological responses of ARDS independent of transfusion events. This comparison with TRALI aids in the identification of changes solely due to transfusion-induced acute lung injury. Research question: What are the unique blood signatures in indirect ARDS patients when transfusion factors are removed from the equation?
Treatment:
Other: Blood sample collection
Patients without transfusion and with infectious pneumonia
Description:
Purpose: Including this group clarifies the distinction between changes driven by infection and those unique to transfusion. By subtracting the effects of infectious responses, we can confirm that biomarkers are related specifically to TRALI. ABR 86798 CURIE study Version 5,April, 2025 16 of 35 Research question: How do the inflammatory cell and protein responses to localized lung infections compare to those induced by TRALI, ensuring biomarkers identified are specific to transfusion-related injury?
Treatment:
Other: Blood sample collection
Healthy volunteers
Description:
Purpose: The inclusion of healthy volunteers in this study is crucial. They provide a baseline of normal physiological and immunological steady-state composition of the blood, allowing us to identify biomarkers specific to TRALI and the other patient subgroups by accounting for baseline variability. This group serves as a valuable control for confounding factors such as critical illness (for which ICU admission), or pre-existing lung injury or concomitant systemic inflammation including the lung (ARDS), which might otherwise obscure the identification of TRALI-specific changes. This enhances data analysis and provides clarity in distinguishing potentially unique pathophysiologic mechanisms in TRALI. Research question: What baseline levels of protein, immune, and cellular profiles in healthy individuals differ from those in ICU patients undergoing transfusion, particular in terms of neutrophil activity, Treg function, and overall inflammation
Treatment:
Other: Blood sample collection

Trial contacts and locations

0

Loading...

Central trial contact

Isabella Viegen, Bsc; Anna-Linda Peters, MD/PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems