The Impact of Malnutrition on Host Responses to Severe Infection in Adults: A Multicenter Analysis from Uganda.
Gabriel Conte Cortez Martins, Julius J Lutwama, Nicholas Owor, Joyce Namulondo, Jesse E Ross, Xuan Lu, Ignatius Asasira, Tonny Kiyingi, et al. (19 authors)
medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences · 2026-04
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Studies of nutritional status and host responses during severe and critical illness have focused predominantly on obesity; in contrast, the relationship between undernutrition, host responses, and clinical outcomes in adults hospitalized with severe infection remains poorly defined. We sought to determine whether severe undernutrition is associated with distinct host responses and clinical outcomes in adults hospitalized with severe infection.
DESIGN: Prospective cohort study.
SETTING: Two public referral hospitals in Uganda.
PATIENTS: Non-pregnant adults (≥18 yr) hospitalized with severe, undifferentiated infection.
INTERVENTIONS: None.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: We analyzed clinical data and serum Olink proteomic data from 432 participants (median age, 45 yr [IQR, 31-57 yr]; 44% male). Overall, 213 participants (49%) met prespecified criteria for undernutrition, including 52 (12%) with severe undernutrition. Clinically, severe undernutrition was associated with HIV coinfection, microbiologically diagnosed tuberculosis, greater physiological instability, and higher mortality. After adjustment for age, sex, illness duration, study site, and HIV, malaria, and tuberculosis coinfection, severe undernutrition was associated with higher expression of proteins involved in pro-inflammatory immune signaling, endothelial and vascular remodeling, hypoxia and oxidative stress responses, and extracellular matrix remodeling, together with lower expression of proteins linked to growth signaling, anticoagulant regulation, and lipid homeostasis.
CONCLUSIONS: Severe undernutrition is associated with a distinct high-risk clinical phenotype and biologic signature in adults hospitalized with severe infection. These findings suggest that undernutrition may potentiate key domains of sepsis pathobiology, with implications for strengthening nutritional support and informing host-directed treatment strategies in low- and middle-income countries where malnutrition is common.