| Literature DB >> 24206943 |
Marcel A Kopp, Claudia Druschel, Christian Meisel, Thomas Liebscher, Erik Prilipp, Ralf Watzlawick, Paolo Cinelli, Andreas Niedeggen, Klaus-Dieter Schaser, Guido A Wanner, Armin Curt, Gertraut Lindemann, Natalia Nugaeva, Michael G Fehlings, Peter Vajkoczy, Mario Cabraja, Julius Dengler, Wolfgang Ertel, Axel Ekkernkamp, Peter Martus, Hans-Dieter Volk, Nadine Unterwalder, Uwe Kölsch, Benedikt Brommer, Rick C Hellmann, Ramin R Ossami Saidy, Ines Laginha, Harald Prüss, Vieri Failli, Ulrich Dirnagl, Jan M Schwab1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Infections are the leading cause of death in the acute phase following spinal cord injury and qualify as independent risk factor for poor neurological outcome ("disease modifying factor"). The enhanced susceptibility for infections is not stringently explained by the increased risk of aspiration in tetraplegic patients, neurogenic bladder dysfunction, or by high-dose methylprednisolone treatment. Experimental and clinical pilot data suggest that spinal cord injury disrupts the balanced interplay between the central nervous system and the immune system. The primary hypothesis is that the Spinal Cord Injury-induced Immune Depression Syndrome (SCI-IDS) is 'neurogenic' including deactivation of adaptive and innate immunity with decreased HLA-DR expression on monocytes as a key surrogate parameter. Secondary hypotheses are that the Immune Depression Syndrome is i) injury level- and ii) severity-dependent, iii) triggers transient lymphopenia, and iv) causes qualitative functional leukocyte deficits, which may endure the post-acute phase after spinal cord injury. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24206943 PMCID: PMC3827331 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2377-13-168
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Figure 1Multicenter structure and trial management. Legend: Scheme of the trial workflow. BL-C = Berlin-Charité, BL-T = Berlin-Trauma-Hospital; TU = Biometry Tübingen; ZH-U = Zurich-University Hospital; ZH-B = Zurich-Balgrist; TO = University Hospital Toronto.
Figure 2Relay-interaction of the immune system and the central nervous system. Legend: Groups for primary comparison in relation to the major sympathetic outflow (vegetative innervation). In Group I (SCI of the neurological level T4 or above) the lesion is localized within the spinal segments C2-T5, resulting in a disturbance of the sympathetic innervation of immunologically relevant organs through the coeliac ganglion and further ganglia connected through lower segments of the spinal cord. Of note, the neurological level is defined by the ISNCSCI as the most cranial segment with normal sensory function and a muscle grade of at least 3/5 with normal function in the segments above on both sides of the body, i.e. in case of a neurological level T4, the lesion begins in the segment T5. In Group II (SCI of the neurological level T5 or below) the lesion is located in the spinal segment T6 or below. Thus, the sympathetic outflow to the coeliac ganglion is expected being only partially disrupted or completely preserved. Group III consists of patients with vertebral fracture alone without injury to the spinal cord (control). Here, the sympathetic innervation is intact.
Eligibility criteria
| (1) | Patients with acute isolated spinal cord injury (AIS A-D) planned for surgical stabilization and decompression, lesion may include more than 1 segment |
| (2) | Patients with acute isolated spinal fracture planned for surgical stabilization, lesion may include more than 1 segment |
| (3) | ≥ 2 spinal cord or vertebral lesions definable one from another |
| (4) | Legal age of the patient |
| (5) | Documented informed consent of the patient |
| (1) | Non-traumatic spinal cord injury |
| (2) | 2 or more spinal cord or vertebral lesions definable one from another |
| (3) | Severe polytrauma |
| (4) | Concomitant traumatic brain injury (TBI) |
| (5) | Neoplasia and/or antineoplastic therapy |
| (6) | Rheumatic disease, collagenosis, vasculitis or other autoimmune disease |
| (7) | Preexisting chronic infectious disease (before the injury) |
| (8) | Preexisting systemic steroid treatment |
| (9) | Severe alcohol or drug addiction |
| (10) | Pregnancy, lactation |
Figure 3Longitudinal trial design. Legend: Assessment points and time frames. The starting point of the time line is the time of injury not the time of surgery. In the case of difficulties in scheduling the visits 2 to 5 may be conducted within the indicated time windows (italic). The circadian rhythmics are respected.
Diagnostic criteria for chest infection and urinary tract infection
| Chest infection, if ≥ 3 criteria apply | Temperature < 36.0°C or ≥ 37.5°C |
| Putrid secretion | |
| Pathological respiration (rales, bronchial breathing, tachypnea > 22/min) | |
| Opacities in chest x ray (required for the diagnosis of pneumonia) | |
| Detection of pathogenic germs in sputum | |
| pO2 < 70 mmHg/O2 saturation < 93% | |
| Urinary tract infection, if ≥ 1 criteria apply | Bacteriuria with bacterial count > 105 cells/ml |
| Leukocyturia ≥ 100 WBC/mm3, respectively 100.000 WBC/ml | |
| Symptomatic urinary tract infection, if ≥ 1 criteria apply | ≥ 1 criteria for urinary tract infection |
| ≥ 1 of the following criteria: fever, suprapubic or flank discomfort, bladder spasm, increased spasticity, worsening dysreflexia |
Figure 4SCI-IDS Immunephenotyping – qualitative and quantitative measures. Legend: Scheme of blood collection, sample preparation and analysis procedures. ConA = Concanavalin A, ELISA = Enzyme Linked Immunosorbent Assay, ELISPOT = Enzyme Linked Immunosorbent Spot, FACS = Fluorescence-activated cell sorting, IFN-g = Interferon-gamma, TNF-g = Tumor necrosis factor – gamma.
Thresholds for the interpretation of the analysis of HLA-DR expression on monocytes
| > 15 000 | Normal diagnostic findings |
| 10 000 – 15 000 | Immunodepression |
| 5 000–10 000 | Borderline immunoparalysis |
| < 5 000 | Immunoparalysis |
Administrative interim analysis of the recruitment status for patients without high-dose methylprednisolone treatment
| 118 (100) | 48 (100) | 31 (100) | 39 (100) | n.a. | |
| 60 (51) | 28 (58) | 11 (35) | 17 (44) | 4 |
Legend: Sixty patients without high-dose methylprednisolone treatment were included into the SCIentinel trial from August 2011 to April 2013. The number of patients recruited into the group of SCI patients of the neurological level T5 or below was slightly smaller than expected. This does not match the natural distribution of the lesion level and seems to be random. In total, four patients (7%) dropped out of the interim analysis due to occurrence of exclusion criteria.
Administrative interim analysis of the completeness of laboratory data (flow cytometry) for each visit relative to the number of enrolled patients feasible for 'per protocol’ analysis
| Complete data n | 32 | 38 | 44 | 44 | 25 | |
| (% of 'per protocol’ population) | (57) | (68) | (79) | (79) | (45) | |
| Complete data n | 17 | 20 | 22 | 22 | 16 | |
| (% of 'per protocol’ population) | (61) | (71) | (79) | (79) | (57) | |
| Complete data n | 6 | 6 | 8 | 10 | 5 | |
| (% of 'per protocol’ population) | (55) | (55) | (73) | (91) | (45) | |
| Complete data n | 9 | 12 | 14 | 12 | 4 | |
| (% of 'per protocol’ population) | (53) | (71) | (82) | (71) | (24) |
Legend: The completeness of the main laboratory data was calculated for the three groups relative to the number of enrolled patients feasible for 'per protocol’ analysis. The sample size calculation takes a 50% rate of drop out or missing values into account. Considering the drop out rate < 10% at the current stage of the trial, a 60% rate of data completeness is acceptable. Critical rates of overall completeness are observed at visit 1 and visit 5 and relate mainly to the control group and to patients with neurological level T5 or below.