Lymphopenia and risk of infection and infection-related death in 98,344 individuals from a prospective Danish population-based study.

BACKGROUND:Neutropenia increases the risk of infection, but it is unknown if this also applies to lymphopenia. We therefore tested the hypotheses that lymphopenia is associated with increased risk of infection and infection-related death in the general population. METHODS AND FINDINGS:Of the invited...

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Main Authors: Marie Warny, Jens Helby, Børge Grønne Nordestgaard, Henrik Birgens, Stig Egil Bojesen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-11-01
Series:PLoS Medicine
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6211632?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-4e5d8dc2ca8d47fdb1926c7c5a4b2f022020-11-25T01:15:36ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Medicine1549-12771549-16762018-11-011511e100268510.1371/journal.pmed.1002685Lymphopenia and risk of infection and infection-related death in 98,344 individuals from a prospective Danish population-based study.Marie WarnyJens HelbyBørge Grønne NordestgaardHenrik BirgensStig Egil BojesenBACKGROUND:Neutropenia increases the risk of infection, but it is unknown if this also applies to lymphopenia. We therefore tested the hypotheses that lymphopenia is associated with increased risk of infection and infection-related death in the general population. METHODS AND FINDINGS:Of the invited 220,424 individuals, 99,191 attended examination. We analyzed 98,344 individuals from the Copenhagen General Population Study (Denmark), examined from November 25, 2003, to July 9, 2013, and with available blood lymphocyte count at date of examination. During a median of 6 years of follow-up, they developed 8,401 infections and experienced 1,045 infection-related deaths. Due to the completeness of the Danish civil and health registries, none of the 98,344 individuals were lost to follow-up, and those emigrating (n = 385) or dying (n = 5,636) had their follow-up truncated at the day of emigration or death. At date of examination, mean age was 58 years, and 44,181 (44.9%) were men. Individuals with lymphopenia (lymphocyte count < 1.1 × 109/l, n = 2,352) compared to those with lymphocytes in the reference range (1.1-3.7 × 109/l, n = 93,538) had multivariable-adjusted hazard ratios of 1.41 (95% CI 1.28-1.56) for any infection, 1.31 (1.14-1.52) for pneumonia, 1.44 (1.15-1.79) for skin infection, 1.26 (1.02-1.56) for urinary tract infection, 1.51 (1.21-1.89) for sepsis, 1.38 (1.01-1.88) for diarrheal disease, 2.15 (1.16-3.98) for endocarditis, and 2.26 (1.21-4.24) for other infections. The corresponding hazard ratio for infection-related death was 1.70 (95% CI 1.37-2.10). Analyses were adjusted for age, sex, smoking status, cumulative smoking, alcohol intake, body mass index, plasma C-reactive protein, blood neutrophil count, recent infection, Charlson comorbidity index, autoimmune diseases, medication use, and immunodeficiency/hematologic disease. The findings were robust in all stratified analyses and also when including only events later than 2 years after first examination. However, due to the observational design, the study cannot address questions of causality, and our analyses might theoretically have been affected by residual confounding and reverse causation. In principle, fluctuating lymphocyte counts over time might also have influenced analyses, but lymphocyte counts in 5,181 individuals measured 10 years after first examination showed a regression dilution ratio of 0.68. CONCLUSIONS:Lymphopenia was associated with increased risk of hospitalization with infection and increased risk of infection-related death in the general population. Notably, causality cannot be deduced from our data.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6211632?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marie Warny
Jens Helby
Børge Grønne Nordestgaard
Henrik Birgens
Stig Egil Bojesen
spellingShingle Marie Warny
Jens Helby
Børge Grønne Nordestgaard
Henrik Birgens
Stig Egil Bojesen
Lymphopenia and risk of infection and infection-related death in 98,344 individuals from a prospective Danish population-based study.
PLoS Medicine
author_facet Marie Warny
Jens Helby
Børge Grønne Nordestgaard
Henrik Birgens
Stig Egil Bojesen
author_sort Marie Warny
title Lymphopenia and risk of infection and infection-related death in 98,344 individuals from a prospective Danish population-based study.
title_short Lymphopenia and risk of infection and infection-related death in 98,344 individuals from a prospective Danish population-based study.
title_full Lymphopenia and risk of infection and infection-related death in 98,344 individuals from a prospective Danish population-based study.
title_fullStr Lymphopenia and risk of infection and infection-related death in 98,344 individuals from a prospective Danish population-based study.
title_full_unstemmed Lymphopenia and risk of infection and infection-related death in 98,344 individuals from a prospective Danish population-based study.
title_sort lymphopenia and risk of infection and infection-related death in 98,344 individuals from a prospective danish population-based study.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Medicine
issn 1549-1277
1549-1676
publishDate 2018-11-01
description BACKGROUND:Neutropenia increases the risk of infection, but it is unknown if this also applies to lymphopenia. We therefore tested the hypotheses that lymphopenia is associated with increased risk of infection and infection-related death in the general population. METHODS AND FINDINGS:Of the invited 220,424 individuals, 99,191 attended examination. We analyzed 98,344 individuals from the Copenhagen General Population Study (Denmark), examined from November 25, 2003, to July 9, 2013, and with available blood lymphocyte count at date of examination. During a median of 6 years of follow-up, they developed 8,401 infections and experienced 1,045 infection-related deaths. Due to the completeness of the Danish civil and health registries, none of the 98,344 individuals were lost to follow-up, and those emigrating (n = 385) or dying (n = 5,636) had their follow-up truncated at the day of emigration or death. At date of examination, mean age was 58 years, and 44,181 (44.9%) were men. Individuals with lymphopenia (lymphocyte count < 1.1 × 109/l, n = 2,352) compared to those with lymphocytes in the reference range (1.1-3.7 × 109/l, n = 93,538) had multivariable-adjusted hazard ratios of 1.41 (95% CI 1.28-1.56) for any infection, 1.31 (1.14-1.52) for pneumonia, 1.44 (1.15-1.79) for skin infection, 1.26 (1.02-1.56) for urinary tract infection, 1.51 (1.21-1.89) for sepsis, 1.38 (1.01-1.88) for diarrheal disease, 2.15 (1.16-3.98) for endocarditis, and 2.26 (1.21-4.24) for other infections. The corresponding hazard ratio for infection-related death was 1.70 (95% CI 1.37-2.10). Analyses were adjusted for age, sex, smoking status, cumulative smoking, alcohol intake, body mass index, plasma C-reactive protein, blood neutrophil count, recent infection, Charlson comorbidity index, autoimmune diseases, medication use, and immunodeficiency/hematologic disease. The findings were robust in all stratified analyses and also when including only events later than 2 years after first examination. However, due to the observational design, the study cannot address questions of causality, and our analyses might theoretically have been affected by residual confounding and reverse causation. In principle, fluctuating lymphocyte counts over time might also have influenced analyses, but lymphocyte counts in 5,181 individuals measured 10 years after first examination showed a regression dilution ratio of 0.68. CONCLUSIONS:Lymphopenia was associated with increased risk of hospitalization with infection and increased risk of infection-related death in the general population. Notably, causality cannot be deduced from our data.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6211632?pdf=render
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