| Literature DB >> 22606232 |
Marc G Jeschke1, Felicia N Williams, Celeste C Finnerty, Noe A Rodriguez, Gabriela A Kulp, Arny Ferrando, William B Norbury, Oscar E Suman, Robert Kraft, Ludwik K Branski, Ahmed M Al-mousawi, David N Herndon.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hypercortisolemia has been suggested as a primary hormonal mediator of whole-body catabolism following severe burn injury. Ketoconazole, an anti-fungal agent, inhibits cortisol synthesis. We, therefore, studied the effect of ketoconazole on post-burn cortisol levels and the hyper-catabolic response in a prospective randomized trial (block randomization 2:1). METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22606232 PMCID: PMC3350497 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0035465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Consort Diagram.
Patient demographics and the effect of ketoconazole.
| Control (n = 32) | Ketoconazole (n = 17) |
|
| |
| Length of ketoconazole administration (days) | NA | 34±8* | S | <.001 |
|
| ||||
| Age (yrs) | 9±1 | 7±1 | NS | .35 |
| Gender (F/M) | 11/21 | 3/14 | NS | .22 |
| XHispanic (%) | 94 | 76 | NS | .16 |
| Caucasian (%) | 6 | 24 | NS | .16 |
| Time to admission (days) | 4±1 | 4±1 | NS | .65 |
| LOS ICU survivors (days) | 35±4 | 40±7 | NS | .48 |
| TBSA burned (%) | 57±3 | 63±6 | NS | .19 |
| 3rd degree (%) | 49±5 | 53±8 | NS | .74 |
| Flame burn (%) | 92 | 73 | NS | .97 |
| Electrical burn (%) | 4 | 9 | NS | .97 |
| Scald burn (%) | 4 | 18 | NS | .97 |
| LOS/% TBSA burned survivors (days/%) | 0.6±0.06 | 0.6±0.09 | NS | .94 |
| No. of surgeries in survivors | 5±1 | 5±1 | NS | .68 |
| Inhalation injury (%) | 13 (41%) | 9 (53%) | NS | .41 |
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| Number of minor infections | 10 (31%) | 5 (29%) | NS | 1.0 |
| Sepsis (n) | 5 (16%) | 3 (17%) | NS | 1.0 |
| Multi-organ failure (n) | 7 (22%) | 5 (29%) | NS | .72 |
TBSA = total body surface area. LOS = length of stay. Data are presented as means ± SEM, counts, or percentages. *Significant difference for control versus ketoconazole for corresponding parameter, p<.05.
Figure 2Ketoconazole administration reduces urinary cortisol levels.
Data are presented as mean ± SEM. *Significant difference for control vs. ketoconazole at corresponding time point, p<.05. There were no significant differences between control and ketoconazole-treated patients before ketoconazole treatment. Ketoconazole therapy was initiated by the first week post burn. Urinary cortisol approached normal values in ketoconazole-treated patients and was significantly decreased during therapy.
Figure 3Nor-epinephrine levels are not altered by ketoconazole administration.
Data are presented as mean ± SEM. Norepinephrine was significantly elevated post-burn compared to normal values (p<0.05).
ACTH stimulation test results.
| Time of measurements | Control | Mean increase from baseline | Ketoconazole | Mean increase from baseline |
|
| Baseline | 23±6 | − | 38±16 | − | .31 |
| 30 minutes | 36±6 | 13±3 | 49±24 | 25±9 | .23 |
| 60 minutes | 56±3 | 32±3 | 79±28 | 26±4 | .26 |
Data are presented as means ± SEM. There were no significant differences between groups at baseline, 30 min, or 60 min and no differences in mean increases.
Figure 4Ketoconazole administration does not alter hypermetabolism or catabolism.
Data are presented as mean ± SEM. A, Resting energy expenditure was significantly higher in control and ketoconazole-treated patients than in non-burned volunteers. There were no significant differences between control and ketoconazole-treated patients. B, Changes in net protein balance induced by burn injury, or more specifically changes in muscle protein synthesis and breakdown, were measured by stable isotope studies using d5-phenyalanine infusion. Black bars indicate week one post burn and white bars week three post burn. There were no significant differences between groups. Both groups were catabolic during the study period. C, There was severe whole-body catabolism post burn. There were no significant differences between groups.