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Get Free AccessPatients with diabetes mellitus are more prone to bacterial sepsis, but there are conflicting data on whether outcomes are worse in diabetics after presentation with sepsis. Glyburide is an oral hypoglycemic agent used to treat diabetes mellitus. This K(ATP)-channel blocker and broad-spectrum ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter inhibitor has broad-ranging effects on the immune system, including inhibition of inflammasome assembly and would be predicted to influence the host response to infection.We studied a cohort of 1160 patients with gram-negative sepsis caused by a single pathogen (Burkholderia pseudomallei), 410 (35%) of whom were known to have diabetes. We subsequently studied prospectively diabetics with B. pseudomallei infection (n = 20) to compare the gene expression profile of peripheral whole blood leukocytes in patients who were taking glyburide against those not taking any sulfonylurea.Survival was greater in diabetics than in nondiabetics (38% vs 45%, respectively, P = .04), but the survival benefit was confined to the patient group taking glyburide (adjusted odds ratio .47, 95% confidence interval .28-.74, P = .005). We identified differential expression of 63 immune-related genes (P = .001) in patients taking glyburide, the sum effect of which we predict to be antiinflammatory in the glyburide group.We present observational evidence for a glyburide-associated benefit during human melioidosis and correlate this with an anti-inflammatory effect of glyburide on the immune system.
Gavin Koh, Rapeephan R. Maude, M. Fernanda Schreiber, Direk Limmathurotsakul, W. Joost Wiersinga, Vanaporn Wuthiekanun, Sue J. Lee, Weera Mahavanakul, Wipada Chaowagul, Wirongrong Chierakul, Sir Nicholas White, Tom van der Poll, Nicholas Day, Gordon Dougan, Sharon J. Peacock (2011). Glyburide Is Anti-inflammatory and Associated with Reduced Mortality in Melioidosis. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 52(6), pp. 717-725, DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciq192.
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Type
Article
Year
2011
Authors
15
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Clinical Infectious Diseases
DOI
10.1093/cid/ciq192
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