| Literature DB >> 24257970 |
Christian J Wiedermann1, Michael Joannidis2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To systematically review clinical and preclinical data on hydroxyethyl starch (HES) tissue storage.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24257970 PMCID: PMC7728635 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-013-3156-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Fig. 1Process of study selection
Human studies of HES storage
| Reference |
| Design | Indication | Solution | Dosea | Tissue distribution | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jesch et al. [ | 12 | OS | Surgery | 6 % HES 450/0.7 | 1.0 | Hepatic parenchymal, Kupffer and small bile duct cells, and interstitial histiocytes | – |
| Pfeifer et al. [ | 3 | CR | Dialysis | 6 % HES 70/0.5 | 6.8 | Hepatic sinusoidal lining cells, hepatocytes, bile duct epithelia, endothelial cells, and fibroblasts in portal tracts; 44 mg/g HES measured biochemically in liver of one patient, and storage vacuoles occupied 40–45 % of entire tissue volume in that patient | Development of ascites |
| Dienes et al. [ | 2 | CR | Dialysis | HES 200/0.5 | 10.4 | Massive storage in all types of liver cells with morphologic resemblance to storage disease | Development of ascites with fatal outcome |
| Sirtl et al. [ | 11 | NCS | Surgery | 10 % HES 200/0.5 or 6 % HES 450/0.7 | 1.0 | Kupffer and liver parenchymal cells and histiocytes; lymph nodes; skeletal muscle histiocytes and capillary endothelium; skin macrophages; bone marrow histiocytes; no differences between HES 200/0.5 and HES 450/0.7 | – |
| Burgstaler and Pineda [ | 1 | CR | Plasma exchange | HES 450/0.7 | 82.3 | Lipid-laden macrophages in bone marrow | Anemia |
| Heilmann et al. [ | 60 | RCT | IUGR or gestational hypertension | 10 % HES 200/0.5 | 9.3 | Grade I (light), II (moderate), or III (heavy) HES storage vacuoles in trophoblast among 59.3 % of patients; placental stroma among 45.8 % | Prolonged severe uterine bleeding in 17 % of patients |
| Gall et al. [ | 3 | CR | Otologic disorder | 6 % HES 70/0.5 or 6 % or 10 % HES 200/0.5 | 5.9 | Dermal macrophages and endothelial cells and cutaneous nerve fibers | Pruritus |
| Jurecka et al. [ | 7 | CR | Otologic or neurological disorder | HES 200/0.5 or HES 200/0.62 | 4.2 | Skin of all patients, mainly in macrophages, blood, and lymph vessel endothelial cells, perineural cells, endoneural macrophages of larger nerve tracts, keratinocytes, and Langerhans cells | Pruritus |
| Legendre et al. [ | 90 | NCS | Kidney transplantation | HES | – | Osmotic nephrosis-like lesions in 80 % of HES group vs 14 % of control group ( | Graft loss in 7 of 31 patients with osmotic nephrosis-like lesions vs zero of 55 patients without ( |
| Szeimies et al. [ | 1 | CR | Otologic disorder | HES 200/0.5 | 3.6 | Dermal macrophages and endothelial and perineural cells | Pruritus |
| Leunig et al. [ | 1 | CR | Otologic disorder | 10 % HES 200/0.5 | 8.6 | Dermal macrophages | Pruritus |
| Cittanova et al. [ | 52 | RCT | Kidney transplantation | 6 % HES 200/0.62 | 1.8 | Osmotic nephrosis of proximal and distal tubules in 3/3 HES recipients biopsied vs 0/6 control patients ( | Need for RRT in 33 % of HES group vs 5 % of control group ( |
| Coronel et al. [ | 24 | NCS | Kidney transplantation | HES | 1.4 | Osmotic nephrosis in 4/16 HES recipients vs 2/8 control patients | Urinary output 52.3 % lower in HES group ( |
| Cox and Popple [ | 1 | CR | Surgery | 6 % HES 450/0.7 | 6.5 | Dermal macrophages | Pruritus, erythema, eyelid edema |
| Gall et al. [ | 10 | OS | Otologic disorder | 6 % HES 70/0.5 or 6 % or 10 % HES 200/0.5 | 5.6 | Dermal endothelial cells and perivascular macrophages | Pruritus |
| Speight et al. [ | 3 | CR | Surgery | 6 % HES 450/0.7 | 0.7 | Dermal edema, vessel dilatation, and increase in mast cell number; vacuolated macrophages around vessels and nerves throughout dermis | Pruritus |
| Kiehl et al. [ | 1 | CR | Otologic disorder | HES 450/0.7 | 7.5 | Periocular histiocytes, endothelial cells, basal keratinocytes, and small nerves | Periocular edema and pruritus |
| Lukasewitz et al. [ | 12 | OS | ARDS | 10 % HES 200/0.5 | 13.5 | Kidney, spleen, lymph nodes, lung, liver, pancreas, and intestine | Multiorgan failure and death |
| Sirtl et al. [ | 26 | NCS | Surgery, vascular disease, or chronic leg ulcer | HES 200/0.5, HES 200/0.62, and HES 450/0.7 | 3.5 | Liver parenchymal or sinusoidal spindle-shaped cells, muscle interstitial histiocytes and macrophages, spleen reticular cells, intestine vascular endothelial cells and stromal macrophages, skin vascular endothelial cells and macrophages, perineural cells, endoneural connective tissue cells and Langerhans cells | Severe pruritus in 9/10 patients receiving >2 g kg−1 HES |
| Christidis et al. [ | 9 | OS | Plasma exchange, paracentesis, or dialysis | 6 % HES 200/0.62 | 30.5 | Vacuolization of Kupffer cells in all patients and hepatocytes in 7/9; osmotic nephrosis in 2 patients with renal biopsies | Worsening of hepatic dysfunction with fatal outcome in 8/9 cases; development or worsening of renal dysfunction in 2 patients |
| de Labarthe et al. [ | 1 | CR | Surgery | HES | 0.5 | Osmotic nephrosis-like lesions in proximal tubules | Oliguric acute kidney injury |
| Ständer et al. [ | 147 | NCS | Otologic disorder, surgery, and other | HES 70/0.5, HES 200/0.62, or HES 450/0.7 | 5.2 | Vacuolization of perivascular histiocytes in all skin biopsies; HES storage also observed in blood and lymphatic vessel endothelial cells, basal keratinocytes, epidermal Langerhans cells, and sweat gland epithelia | Pruritus in 39.5 % of patients exposed to HES |
| Weisshaar et al. [ | 1 | CR | Trauma | HES | 1.3 | Dermal macrophages, blood vessel endothelial cells, nonmyelinated nerve cells, and Schwann cells | Severe persistent pruritus |
| Pillebout et al. [ | 26 | OS | Orthotopic liver transplantation | 6 % HES 200/0.62 | ≤1.6 | Osmotic nephrosis-like lesions in 61.5 % of patients | – |
| Ständer et al. [ | 1 | CR | Trauma | HES | 18.0 | HES storage vacuoles in cutaneous macrophages, endothelial cells, and Schwann cells | Severe pruritus |
| Auwerda et al. [ | 16 | NCS | Plasmapheresis | 6 % HES 200/0.5 | 30.2 | Foam cells in bone marrow aspirates of all 5 HES recipients tested | Acquired lysosomal storage disease in 1 patient after 116 g/kg HES |
| Ebcioglu et al. [ | 1 | CR | Kidney transplantation | 6 % HES 450/0.7 in lactated electrolyte | 1.1 | Osmotic nephrosis-like lesions of proximal tubular epithelial cells | Delayed graft function |
| Schmidt-Hieber et al. [ | 1 | CR | Trauma | 6 % HES 130/0.4 and 6 and 10 % HES 200/0.5 | 17.1 | Severe hyperplasia and hypertrophy of foamy portal macrophages and Kupffer cells and hepatocyte swelling; heavy infiltration of foamy cell degenerated macrophages throughout bone marrow accounting for 50 % of nucleated cells | Persistent thrombocytopenia and liver dysfunction with fatal outcome |
| Kamann et al. [ | 21 | OS | Otologic, circulatory, and unspecified disorder | 6 % and 10 % HES | 4.3 | Dermal macrophages, endothelium, and nerve cells | Pruritus |
| Chappell et al. [ | 1 | CR | Otologic disorder | 6 % HES 450/0.7 | 12.4 | Bone marrow histiocytes | Subdural hematoma, bone marrow suppression, and pruritus |
| Haught et al. [ | 1 | CR | Surgery | 6 % HES | – | Dermal macrophages | Severe pruritus |
| Jamal et al. [ | 1 | CR | Surgery | 10 % HES 200/0.5 | 9.2 | Renal tubular cells | Chronic renal failure |
| Hagne et al. [ | 1 | CR | Sepsis | 6 % HES 130/0.4 | 4.9 | Proximal tubular epithelial cells | Severe renal insufficiency persisting ≥3 years |
| Zhao et al. [ | 1 | CR | Hypovolemia | 6 % HES | 3.5 | Severe inflammatory cell infiltrate in renal biopsy | Acute kidney injury |
| Aneja et al. [ | 1 | CR | Surgery | 6 % HES 450/0.7 in lactated electrolyte | 0.5 | Dermal macrophages | Pruritus |
| Kumar and Suneja [ | 1 | CR | Surgery | 6 % HES 450/0.7 | 0.7 | Proximal tubular epithelial cells | Acute kidney injury |
| Ständer et al. [ | 70 | OS | Otologic disorder, surgery, trauma, and other | HES 70/0.5, HES 130/0.4, and HES 200/0.5 | 4.3 | Dermal macrophages in all patients and endothelial and/or nerve cells in 41 % | Severe pruritus |
ARDS acute respiratory distress syndrome, CR case report, HES hydroxyethyl starch, IUGR intrauterine growth retardation, NCS nonrandomized controlled study, OS observational study, RCT randomized controlled trial, RRT renal replacement therapy
aMean or individual patient cumulative dose (g kg−1)
Fig. 2Percentages of patients with moderate to heavy vacuolization of dermal histiocytes as a function of cumulative HES dose in a study of 115 patients receiving assorted HES solutions for otologic disorder, surgery, and other indications [29]. HES hydroxyethyl starch
Fig. 3Electron micrograph of osmotic nephrosis persisting 6 months after the development of acute kidney injury in a patient with septic shock who had received 6 % HES 130/0.4 at a cumulative dose of 4.9 g kg−1 [44]. Severe renal insufficiency continued ≥3 years after HES 130/0.4 exposure. HES hydroxyethyl starch
Fig. 4Severe hyperplasia and hypertrophy of foamy portal macrophages and Kupffer cells and swelling of hepatocytes (top) and heavy infiltration of bone marrow with foamy cell degenerated macrophages, which accounted for approximately 50 % of nucleated cells, and marked depletion of fat cells (bottom) in a trauma patient who developed persistent thrombocytopenia and liver dysfunction and died after a 17.1 g kg−1 cumulative dose of 6 % HES 130/0.4 and 6 and 10 % HES 200/0.5 [37]. HES hydroxyethyl starch