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Depth of neutrophil mobilization stratifies survival in ST-elevation myocardial infarction.

Created on 04 Jul 2026

Authors

Mathis Richter, Jessica von Göwels, Maximilian Fähndrich, Christian Lipgens Fernandez, Katharina Grohn, Marius Welzel, Dennis Schwarz, Alexander Lang, Amin Polzin, Sara Reinartz Groba, Luca Farinola, Susmita Ghosh, Jan-Niklas Heming, Hanna Aleth, Anastassia Akhalkatsi, Kian Marjani, Nicole Rübsamen, Tobias Radecke, Frank Rosenbauer, Albert Sickmann, André Karch, Alexander Zarbock, Jens Minnerup, Jürgen Sindermann, Alexander Bender, Jan Rossaint, Steffen Ormanns, Matthias Gunzer, Mariano Malamud, Rainer Kaiser, Kami Pekayvaz, Dominik Heider, Holger Reinecke, Lena Makowski, Christian Jung, Carlos Silvestre-Roig, Malte Kelm, Norbert Gerdes, Raphael Chevre, Stefan A Lange, Oliver Soehnlein

Published in

Nature cardiovascular research. Jul 03, 2026. Epub Jul 03, 2026.

Abstract

Systemic inflammatory responses shape clinical outcomes in acute cardiovascular disease. Because of their functional plasticity and rapid turnover, neutrophils have emerged as dynamic indicators of inflammatory stress. Here we profile the appearance of distinct neutrophil maturation stages in patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction, heart failure and stroke. Our data reveal the mobilization of immature neutrophils in all groups; however, patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction exhibited the most pronounced engagement of this response, including the appearance of CD16lowCD10neg preneutrophils (preNeus), the final mitotic neutrophil progenitor, which was associated with disease outcome. Plasma cytokine profiling identified a coordinated inflammatory signature associated with preNeu mobilization, consistent with emergency granulopoiesis. PreNeus were identifiable as immature granulocytes in routine blood count analysis, where they predicted 30-day mortality better than established biomarkers in two clinical cohorts. Immature granulocytes also remained independently associated with survival in multivariate models incorporating risk factors, enabling the immediate identification of vulnerable patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction upon hospital admission.

PMID:
42399420
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 04 Jul 2026.

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