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Daily Report

Daily Ards Research Analysis

04/24/2026
3 papers selected
13 analyzed

Analyzed 13 papers and selected 3 impactful papers.

Summary

Across ARDS research today, a mechanistic study identifies TMAO as a gut-lung axis mediator that protects the pulmonary vascular barrier via VAV3–Rac1 signaling, a multicohort analysis develops ventilatory ratio-stratified 30-day mortality models, and a preclinical MRI platform quantifies in vivo surfactant distribution. Together, these advances support barrier-targeted therapeutics, phenotype-specific prognostication, and optimization of intrapulmonary delivery strategies.

Research Themes

  • Gut-lung axis mediators and endothelial barrier protection in ARDS/ALI
  • Ventilatory ratio-based ARDS phenotyping and prognostic modeling
  • Translational imaging to optimize intrapulmonary therapy delivery

Selected Articles

1. Gut microbiota-derived trimethylamine-N-oxide protects pulmonary vascular barrier integrity via Vav guanine nucleotide exchange factor 3 (VAV3)-mediated cytoskeletal remodelling in acute lung injury.

81.5Level IIICase-control
British journal of pharmacology · 2026PMID: 42025389

This translational study shows that plasma TMAO is elevated in ARDS and correlates with inflammation, while exogenous TMAO attenuates vascular leak and neutrophil influx in LPS-induced ALI. Mechanistically, TMAO strengthens endothelial barrier integrity via VAV3 upregulation and Rac1-dependent cortical actin remodelling; VAV3 knockdown abrogates protection.

Impact: Identifies a gut microbiota-derived metabolite as a protective mediator in ALI/ARDS and delineates a VAV3–Rac1 mechanism, opening a barrier-focused therapeutic avenue.

Clinical Implications: TMAO or pathways that augment VAV3–Rac1 signaling could be leveraged to preserve pulmonary vascular integrity in ARDS/ALI, supporting biomarker-guided and barrier-targeted interventions pending safety evaluation.

Key Findings

  • Plasma TMAO levels were higher in ARDS patients than in healthy controls and positively correlated with hs-CRP.
  • Exogenous TMAO reduced lung vascular leakage and neutrophil infiltration in an LPS-induced ALI mouse model.
  • Inhibition of gut microbiome-derived TMAO synthesis aggravated lung injury.
  • TMAO upregulated VAV3, promoting Rac1-dependent cortical actin remodelling to enhance endothelial barrier integrity.
  • VAV3 knockdown abolished TMAO’s endothelial barrier-protective effects.

Methodological Strengths

  • Integrative translational design combining human biomarker data with in vivo mouse ALI and in vitro mechanistic assays
  • Genetic knockdown to demonstrate pathway necessity (VAV3) and mechanistic specificity

Limitations

  • Human cohort size and clinical outcomes beyond biomarker correlations were not reported in the abstract
  • ALI model based on LPS may not capture full ARDS heterogeneity; systemic effects of TMAO warrant safety evaluation before clinical translation

Future Directions: Prospective ARDS cohorts to link TMAO trajectories with outcomes, dose–response and safety studies, and cell-specific modulation of VAV3–Rac1 signaling to refine therapeutic windows.

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and acute lung injury (ALI) are characterised by increased pulmonary capillary permeability, but lack effective pharmacotherapies. Emerging evidence implicates gut-lung axis dysregulation in ARDS pathogenesis through microbiome-host interactions, but the specific role of the microbiota-derived metabolite, trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO), remains unclear. EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH: Plasma TMAO and hypersensitive C-reactive protein (hs-CRP) levels were measured in ARDS patients and healthy controls. A lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced ALI mouse model was employed to evaluate the effects of TMAO administration versus the inhibition of its gut microbiome-derived synthesis. In vitro, the necessity of VAV3 in the mechanism of TMAO was confirmed using gene knockdown techniques to assess endothelial barrier integrity. KEY RESULTS: Plasma TMAO levels were significantly elevated in ARDS patients compared with healthy controls, and showed a positive correlation with hs-CRP. In the murine ALI model, TMAO administration reduced lung vascular leakage and neutrophil infiltration, whereas inhibiting its synthesis worsened the injury. Mechanistically, TMAO enhances the integrity of the endothelial barrier by up-regulating VAV3, which in turn drives Rac1-dependent cortical actin reorganisation. Knockdown of VAV3 abolished the protective effects of TMAO on the endothelial barrier integrity. CONCLUSION AND IMPLICATIONS: This study identifies TMAO as an adaptive mediator within the gut-lung axis that mitigates pulmonary vascular hyperpermeability. The protective mechanism operates via the VAV3-Rac1-cytoskeletal signalling pathway, highlighting the therapeutic potential of TMAO in ALI/ARDS.

2. Clinical models for predicting 30-day mortality in ARDS: A focus on ventilatory ratio-defined subgroups.

71Level IIICohort
Journal of intensive medicine · 2026PMID: 42028134

Using ARDSnet for training and MIMIC-IV/eICU for external validation, the authors built 30-day mortality models tailored to high (VR≥2) and low (VR<2) ventilatory ratio subgroups. Models showed strong discrimination, calibration, and decision-analytic utility, and subgroup-specific predictors differed, supporting phenotype-specific prognostication.

Impact: Introduces externally validated, VR-stratified prognostic models that operationalize dead-space physiology for risk prediction in ARDS.

Clinical Implications: VR-specific risk calculators can refine triage, inform family counseling, and enrich clinical trials by targeting subgroups with distinct mortality drivers.

Key Findings

  • Total N=2977 ARDS patients were analyzed across ARDSnet (training) and MIMIC-IV/eICU (external validation).
  • Patients were stratified by ventilatory ratio into high (VR≥2) and low (VR<2) subgroups; subgroup-specific logistic models were developed.
  • High-VR and low-VR models showed good discrimination, calibration, and decision curve analysis utility.
  • Stepwise regression identified 11 predictors for the high-VR model; predictor sets differed between subgroups.
  • DeLong testing indicated subgroup-specific models outperformed alternatives within their respective VR strata.

Methodological Strengths

  • External validation across two independent databases (MIMIC-IV and eICU) with bootstrap internal validation
  • Comprehensive performance assessment (ROC, Brier, calibration, decision curve analysis) and physiologically grounded VR stratification

Limitations

  • Retrospective design with potential residual confounding and database coding/measurement biases
  • VR thresholding and variable availability may limit generalizability to diverse settings

Future Directions: Prospective validation, dynamic (time-updated) models, and integration with ARDS subphenotypes to guide tailored interventions and trial stratification.

BACKGROUND: It is supposed that acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) patients with increased dead space, indicated by elevated ventilatory ratio (VR), had higher mortality. The difference in mortality predictors among ARDS patients categorized by VR remains unclear, so we aimed to investigate the risk factors for mortality prediction in subgroups defined by VR and develop risk models to predict the 30-day mortality in distinct ARDS subgroups. METHODS: This study performed a retrospective analysis using the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care IV (MIMIC-IV) and eICU Collaborative Research Database (eICU-CRD) databases, as well as data from NHLBI ARDS Clinical Trials Network (ARDSnet). Patients were divided into high VR (VR ≥2) and low VR (VR <2) subgroups based on baseline VR. In ARDSnet cohort, two 30-day mortality risk prediction models were constructed using logistic regression, internally validated using the bootstrap method, and externally validated in the MIMIC-IV and eICU-CRD cohorts. The performance of models was evaluated using receiver operating characteristic curves, Brier scores, calibration curves, and decision curve analysis (DCA) curves, and DeLong test was used to compare the predictive efficacy of different models in each subgroup. RESULTS: This study included a total of 2977 ARDS patients: 1031 in the high VR training cohort, 1506 in the low VR training cohort, 159 in the high VR external validation cohort, and 281 in the low VR external validation cohort. Through stepwise regression analysis, 11 predictors were finally selected to construct high VR prediction model including age, body mass index (BMI), heart rate, mean arterial pressure, body temperature, blood urea nitrogen (BUN), bilirubin, minute ventilation, peak inspiratory pressure, inspired oxygen fraction (FiO CONCLUSION: This study developed and validated prognostic prediction models for patients of high and low VR subgroups, respectively. The models demonstrated good discrimination, calibration, and clinical utility. Prognostic risk factors differed between high and low VR subgroups, and prediction models developed for specific VR subgroups exhibited better predictive performance within their respective subgroup populations.

3. Preclinical Quantitative In Vivo MRI Assessment of Exogenous Surfactant Pulmonary Distribution After Clinically Relevant Intratracheal Delivery.

67.5Level VCase series
NMR in biomedicine · 2026PMID: 42026944

Using contrast-enhanced UTE MRI in six juvenile rabbits, the authors achieved voxel-wise quantification of exogenous surfactant distribution in vivo, showing 42% dose retention (vs 93.5% ex vivo), balanced laterality, and consistent peripheral deposition. The motion-robust radial UTE sequence enables sensitive, reliable assessment of delivery homogeneity and distal penetration.

Impact: Establishes a quantitative in vivo imaging platform to map pulmonary surfactant distribution under physiological breathing, enabling rational optimization of intrapulmonary therapy delivery.

Clinical Implications: Preclinical, quantitative imaging can guide dosing, formulation, and delivery strategies for surfactant and other inhaled/intrapulmonary therapies, potentially informing future ARDS/ALI interventions.

Key Findings

  • Voxel-wise in vivo mapping of surfactant distribution was achieved using contrast-enhanced 3D UTE MRI under physiological breathing.
  • In vivo surfactant retention was 42% of the instilled dose, compared with 93.5% in ex vivo isolated thoraces.
  • Laterality indices showed balanced right-left distribution, and distality indices indicated consistent peripheral deposition.
  • Radial UTE minimized motion artifacts, enabling robust quantification in free-breathing conditions.

Methodological Strengths

  • High-resolution, motion-robust radial UTE MRI enabling voxel-wise quantification in vivo
  • Quantitative indices (peripheral volume fraction, laterality, distality) and comparison to ex vivo benchmarks

Limitations

  • Small sample size (n=6) in a juvenile rabbit model limits generalizability
  • Use of gadolinium-labeled surfactant and short-term imaging may not reflect long-term distribution or human physiology

Future Directions: Scale-up studies across dosing and ventilation strategies, correlation with physiological outcomes, and translation to aerosolized therapeutics and large-animal/human feasibility.

Optimizing pulmonary exogenous surfactant delivery remains a critical challenge in neonatal care, particularly for achieving uniform distal lung deposition while minimizing airway obstruction. This study aimed to establish a preclinical imaging framework for quantitative assessment of exogenous surfactant lung distribution in vivo using contrast-enhanced ultrashort echo time (UTE) MRI and to evaluate the impact of physiological processes on surfactant retention and localization. Six juvenile rabbits received intratracheal instillation of a gadolinium-enhanced surfactant solution under clinically relevant conditions. High-resolution, motion-robust 3D UTE MRI datasets were acquired, enabling voxel-wise quantification of signal enhancement, gadolinium concentration, and spatial surfactant lung distribution. Peripheral volume fraction, laterality index, and distality index were computed to characterize deposition homogeneity and distal penetration. In vivo measurements were compared with previously reported ex vivo data from isolated rabbit thoraces. Quantitative MRI enabled precise mapping of surfactant within peripheral alveolar regions. Forty-two percent of the instilled dose was retained in vivo, compared with 93.5% ex vivo. Laterality indices confirmed balanced right-left distribution, while distality indices demonstrated consistent peripheral deposition. The radial UTE sequence minimized motion artifacts and enabled robust voxel-wise quantification under physiological breathing conditions. Quantitative in vivo MRI provides a sensitive and reliable method for assessing pulmonary surfactant delivery, spatial distribution, distal penetration, and homogeneity of deposition. Comparison with ex vivo data underscores the role of physiological processes in surfactant retention. This framework supports optimization of administration strategies in preclinical models and may be extended to other intrapulmonary therapies, establishing a versatile imaging platform for translational research.