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Tuberculous meningitis: metabolism drives mortality

05.22.25 | Radboud University Medical Center

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Radboudumc researchers Kirsten van Abeelen, Edwin Ardiansyah, Sofiati Dian, Vinod Kumar, Reinout van Crevel and Arjan van Laarhoven used metabolomics to study cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from tuberculous meningitis patients in Vietnam and Indonesia, with long-standing collaborators from Bandung and Jakarta (Indonesia), the Broad Institute (Boston) and the Oxford University Research Unit in Ho Chi Minh City (Vietnam).

Meningitis is the most severe form of tuberculosis. Damaging inflammation contributes to its poor prognosis. Corticosteroids reduce mortality, but nearly 50% of patients still die or are left disabled. The researchers hypothesized that metabolic pathways may influence disease outcome and help develop more effective host-directed therapy. They measured levels of 469 metabolites in cerebrospinal fluid obtained from 1,067 Vietnamese and Indonesian tuberculous meningitis patients with and without HIV before the start of treatment, and observed these patients for clinical outcome.

Mortality was strongly associated with ten metabolites, including three hydroxylated fatty acids with a maximum carbon length of eight. These metabolites predicted mortality, regardless of HIV status, disease severity and cerebrospinal fluid tryptophan levels, which they previously identified as an important prognostic metabolite.

The results suggests that dysregulated β-oxidation may be an important and potentially modifiable contributor to mortality in tuberculous meningitis. Follow-up studies are underway, including quantitative trait locus mapping and rare genetic variant analysis, in the same patient groups. Future intervention studies should examine whether interventions targeting cerebral metabolism or oxygenation can improve survival of this deadly disease.

Med

10.1016/j.medj.2025.100703

Observational study

People

Pre-treatment untargeted cerebrospinal fluid metabolomic profiling in tuberculous meningitis reveals pathways associated with mortality

22-May-2025

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Pauline Dekhuijzen
Radboud University Medical Center
pauline.dekhuijzen@radboudumc.nl

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Radboud University Medical Center. (2025, May 22). Tuberculous meningitis: metabolism drives mortality. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LDEOKEK8/tuberculous-meningitis-metabolism-drives-mortality.html
MLA:
"Tuberculous meningitis: metabolism drives mortality." Brightsurf News, May. 22 2025, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LDEOKEK8/tuberculous-meningitis-metabolism-drives-mortality.html.