TY - JOUR
T1 - PROGRESS - prospective observational study on hospitalized community acquired pneumonia
AU - the PROGRESS study group
AU - Ahnert, Peter
AU - Creutz, Petra
AU - Scholz, Markus
AU - Schütte, Hartwig
AU - Engel, Christoph
AU - Hossain, Hamid
AU - Chakraborty, Trinad
AU - Bauer, Michael
AU - Kiehntopf, Michael
AU - Völker, Uwe
AU - Hammerschmidt, Sven
AU - Loeffler, Markus
AU - Suttorp, Norbert
AU - Liebrich, Andreas
AU - Ingrid Maria Stelzmüller, Maria Stelzmüller
AU - Khanavkar, Barbara
AU - Avdic, Aida
AU - Wehde, Deborah
AU - Hauptmeier, Barabara
AU - van Schmädel, Katharina Edle
AU - Steiner, Florian
AU - Kim, Yeji
AU - Drobbe, Lea
AU - Niebank, Michaela
AU - Dobrovits, Katharina
AU - Druckmiller, Hermann
AU - Schott, Galina
AU - Schaberg, Tom
AU - Hering, Iris
AU - Thomas, Klaus
AU - Ursu, Codruta
AU - Ameti, Florijan
AU - Buchenroth, Martin
AU - Kanwar, Oliver
AU - Bernhard Schöffend, Schöffend
AU - Kappauf, Lena
AU - Steiner, Constanze
AU - Bundkirchen, Andreas
AU - Grah, Christian
AU - Steinmetz, Adrian
AU - Wrede, Christian
AU - Stahl, Wolfgang
AU - Wohlers, Antonia
AU - Gabriele Wöbker, Wöbker
AU - Leidag, Markus
AU - Kaufmann, Peter
AU - Schaaf, Bernhard
AU - Dalhoff, Klaus
AU - Rupp, Jan
PY - 2016/7/28
Y1 - 2016/7/28
N2 - Background: Community acquired pneumonia (CAP) is a high incidence disease resulting in about 260,000 hospital admissions per year in Germany, more than myocardial infarction or stroke. Worldwide, CAP is the most frequent infectious disease with high lethality ranging from 1.2 % in those 20-29 years old to over 10 % in patients older than 70 years, even in industrial nations. CAP poses numerous medical challenges, which the PROGRESS (Pneumonia Research Network on Genetic Resistance and Susceptibility for the Evolution of Severe Sepsis) network aims to tackle: Operationalization of disease severity throughout the course of disease, outcome prediction for hospitalized patients and prediction of transitions from uncomplicated CAP to severe CAP, and finally, to CAP with sepsis and organ failure as a life-threatening condition. It is a major aim of PROGRESS to understand and predict patient heterogeneity regarding outcome in the hospital and to develop novel treatment concepts. Methods: PROGRESS was designed as a clinical, observational, multi-center study of patients with CAP requiring hospitalization. More than 1600 patients selected for low burden of co-morbidities have been enrolled, aiming at a total of 3000. Course of disease, along with therapy, was closely monitored by daily assessments and long-term follow-up. Daily blood samples allow in depth molecular-genetic characterization of patients. We established a well-organized workflow for sample logistics and a comprehensive data management system to collect and manage data from more than 50 study centers in Germany and Austria. Samples are stored in a central biobank and clinical data are stored in a central data base which also integrates all data from molecular assessments. Discussion: With the PROGRESS study, we established a comprehensive data base of high quality clinical and molecular data allowing investigation of pressing research questions regarding CAP. In-depth molecular characterization will contribute to the discovery of disease mechanisms and establishment of diagnostic and predictive biomarkers. A strength of PROGRESS is the focus on younger patients with low burden of co-morbidities, allowing a more direct look at host biology with less confounding. As a resulting limitation, insights from PROGRESS will require validation in representative patient cohorts to assess clinical utility. Trial registration: The PROGRESS study was retrospectively registered on May 24th, 2016 with ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02782013
AB - Background: Community acquired pneumonia (CAP) is a high incidence disease resulting in about 260,000 hospital admissions per year in Germany, more than myocardial infarction or stroke. Worldwide, CAP is the most frequent infectious disease with high lethality ranging from 1.2 % in those 20-29 years old to over 10 % in patients older than 70 years, even in industrial nations. CAP poses numerous medical challenges, which the PROGRESS (Pneumonia Research Network on Genetic Resistance and Susceptibility for the Evolution of Severe Sepsis) network aims to tackle: Operationalization of disease severity throughout the course of disease, outcome prediction for hospitalized patients and prediction of transitions from uncomplicated CAP to severe CAP, and finally, to CAP with sepsis and organ failure as a life-threatening condition. It is a major aim of PROGRESS to understand and predict patient heterogeneity regarding outcome in the hospital and to develop novel treatment concepts. Methods: PROGRESS was designed as a clinical, observational, multi-center study of patients with CAP requiring hospitalization. More than 1600 patients selected for low burden of co-morbidities have been enrolled, aiming at a total of 3000. Course of disease, along with therapy, was closely monitored by daily assessments and long-term follow-up. Daily blood samples allow in depth molecular-genetic characterization of patients. We established a well-organized workflow for sample logistics and a comprehensive data management system to collect and manage data from more than 50 study centers in Germany and Austria. Samples are stored in a central biobank and clinical data are stored in a central data base which also integrates all data from molecular assessments. Discussion: With the PROGRESS study, we established a comprehensive data base of high quality clinical and molecular data allowing investigation of pressing research questions regarding CAP. In-depth molecular characterization will contribute to the discovery of disease mechanisms and establishment of diagnostic and predictive biomarkers. A strength of PROGRESS is the focus on younger patients with low burden of co-morbidities, allowing a more direct look at host biology with less confounding. As a resulting limitation, insights from PROGRESS will require validation in representative patient cohorts to assess clinical utility. Trial registration: The PROGRESS study was retrospectively registered on May 24th, 2016 with ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02782013
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84982151887&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/s12890-016-0255-8
DO - 10.1186/s12890-016-0255-8
M3 - Journal articles
C2 - 27535544
AN - SCOPUS:84982151887
SN - 1471-2466
VL - 16
JO - BMC Pulmonary Medicine
JF - BMC Pulmonary Medicine
IS - 1
M1 - 108
ER -