Frantzi M, Keller F, Latosinska A, Beige J, Mebazaa A, Caillard A, An D, Perco P, Schanstra JP, Catanese L, Wendt R, Rupprecht H, Staessen JA, Vlahou A, Mischak H, Siwy J (2026)
Publication Type: Journal article
Publication year: 2026
DOI: 10.1002/pmic.70131
Organ fibrosis caused by the presence of excessive extracellular matrix (ECM) is related to mortality. Urinary peptide signatures were reported to be predictive of death in SARS-CoV-2 and chronic kidney disease. Such signatures were composed for 68% of collagen fragments. In this study, we examined whether urinary collagen peptides, potentially representing organ fibrosis, could predict mortality in patients with critical and non-critical conditions. Urinary proteomic data from 1012 patients with follow-up information from the CRIT-COV-U study were investigated for the association of collagen peptides with short-term mortality. Independent datasets from 9193 patients were used for validation, including 1719 patients sampled at intensive care unit (ICU) admission and 7474 patients with other diseases (outside the ICU). A total of 607 collagen peptides were significantly associated with mortality. A classifier based on 210 collagen peptides (COL210) predicting mortality was developed and validated in patients in the ICU (ICU
APA:
Frantzi, M., Keller, F., Latosinska, A., Beige, J., Mebazaa, A., Caillard, A.,... Siwy, J. (2026). Urinary Collagen Peptides Predict Mortality. Proteomics. https://doi.org/10.1002/pmic.70131
MLA:
Frantzi, Maria, et al. "Urinary Collagen Peptides Predict Mortality." Proteomics (2026).
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