Abstract
We read with interest the commentary by Hoffmann and colleagues [1] on our manuscript recently published in Critical Care showing that matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9, MMP-10 and tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases (TIMP)-1 could be new biomarkers of severity and mortality in sepsis [2]. As they stated, the lack of serial measurements of MMPs and TIMPs over clinical evolution was as a limitation of our study. Despite this limitation, our results suggest that MMPs and TIMPs may be of pathophysiological significance in sepsis.
Some clinical studies have found higher circulating levels of MMP-9 [2-4] and TIMP-1 [2,3] in septic patients than in healthy controls, and higher levels of TIMP-1 [2,3] or MMP-9 [4] in nonsurviving than in surviving septic patients. Our study also reports, for the first time, that MMP-10 circulating levels are also elevated in septic patients [2]. According to the results of some in vitro studies, MMP-10 could play a role in infection, since increased MMP-10 gene transcription was observed after infective stimulation of human and mice cells.
On the other hand, we think the correlation between MMP-9, TIMP-1 and markers of coagulopathy, and the lower MMP-9/TIMP-1 ratio in nonsurviving than in surviving septic patients found in our study, may be associated with a higher prothrombotic/antifibrinolytic state, responsible for the capillary thrombosis, multiple organ dysfunction, and death.
Finally, from a therapeutic perspective, the development of modulators of MMP/TIMP activity could be used as a new class of drugs for the treatment of severe sepsis [5].
Abbreviations
MMP: matrix metalloproteinase; TIMP: tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
See related commentary by Hoffmann et al., http://ccforum.com/content/13/6/1006
Contributor Information
Leonardo Lorente, Email: lorentemartin@msn.com.
María M Martín, Email: marmartin@gmail.com.
Jordi Solé-Violán, Email: jsolvio@gobiernodecanarias.org.
José Blanquer, Email: blanquer_jos@gva.es.
José Antonio Páramo, Email: japaramo@unav.es.
Acknowledgements
The present study was supported, in part, by a grant from the Canary Islands Foundation for Health and Research (FUNCIS number PI 42/07) (Tenerife, Spain), by a grant from the Working Group on Infectious Diseases of the Spanish Society of Intensive Medicine, Critical Care, and Coronary Units (GTEI-SEMICYUC-2009), by funding from the Rafael Clavijo Foundation for Biomedical Research (Tenerife, Spain) and by the UTE project CIMA (University of Navarra, Spain).
References
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