Literature DB >> 24257970

Accumulation of hydroxyethyl starch in human and animal tissues: a systematic review.

Christian J Wiedermann1, Michael Joannidis2.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To systematically review clinical and preclinical data on hydroxyethyl starch (HES) tissue storage.
METHODS: MEDLINE (PubMed) was searched and abstracts were screened using defined criteria to identify articles containing original data on HES tissue accumulation.
RESULTS: Forty-eight studies were included: 37 human studies with a total of 635 patients and 11 animal studies. The most frequent indication for fluid infusion was surgery accounting for 282 patients (45.9%). HES localization in skin was shown by 17 studies, in kidney by 12, in liver by 8, and in bone marrow by 5. Additional sites of HES deposition were lymph nodes, spleen, lung, pancreas, intestine, muscle, trophoblast, and placental stroma. Among major organs the highest measured tissue concentration of HES was in the kidney. HES uptake into intracellular vacuoles was observed by 30 min after infusion. Storage was cumulative, increasing in proportion to dose, although in 15% of patients storage and associated symptoms were demonstrated at the lowest cumulative doses (0.4 g kg(-1)). Some HES deposits were extremely long-lasting, persisting for 8 years or more in skin and 10 years in kidney. Pruritus associated with HES storage was described in 17 studies and renal dysfunction in ten studies. In one included randomized trial, HES infusion produced osmotic nephrosis-like lesions indicative of HES storage (p = 0.01) and also increased the need for renal replacement therapy (odds ratio, 9.50; 95% confidence interval, 1.09-82.7; p = 0.02). The tissue distribution of HES was generally similar in animals and humans.
CONCLUSIONS: Tissue storage of HES is widespread, rapid, cumulative, frequently long-lasting, and potentially harmful.

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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


Introduction

The artificial colloid hydroxyethyl starch (HES) is administered intravenously to treat or prevent hypovolemia. While circulating in the plasma, HES exerts colloid osmotic pressure that causes water to remain in or to be drawn into the plasma to increase blood volume. Since its introduction in the 1970s, several HES products, differing in physicochemical properties such as molecular weight and degree and pattern of hydroxyethylation, i.e., substitution, have been used clinically. HES products are plant-derived polymers of glucose that have been chemically modified to resist degradation. After infusion, HES exits the plasma over a matter of hours to days, depending upon its physicochemical properties. HES is either excreted in the urine or taken up in tissues. In a recent meta-analysis we concluded that 26–42 % of HES may reside in human tissue at 24 h after infusion [1]. However, that meta-analysis dealt with whole-body tissue uptake derived from plasma persistence and urinary excretion data rather than direct observations of storage in biopsy or necropsy specimens. Despite the widespread and long-standing use of HES for clinical fluid management, tissue uptake and storage of this artificial colloid remain poorly appreciated in humans and important questions remain unanswered. Evidence on its distribution in tissues and organs has not been systematically reviewed. The timing, dose-dependency, persistence, and functional consequences of HES tissue storage also remain unclear. We here present the first systematic review to address those questions.

Materials and methods

Search strategy

Published evidence, including clinical and preclinical data, on tissue deposition of HES was sourced from MEDLINE (PubMed). A search phrase was devised containing various terms related to HES and tissue accumulation (Table 1 in the Electronic Supplementary Material). In vitro studies, opinion-based articles (e.g., commentaries and editorials), and narrative, non-systematic reviews were not included in the search criteria. Letters were provisionally included as they might contain original data.

Selection of studies

The titles and abstracts of all articles retrieved by the search were assessed by CJW and MJ (without blinding to journal and authors) to identify relevant articles. Relevance was defined using the eligibility criteria as listed in Table 2 in the Electronic Supplementary Material. Relevant articles essentially comprised any studies appearing to report original data on whether or not HES was present in cells and tissues of humans or animals. Inclusion of studies was not restricted by any methodological criteria or language of reporting. Articles were excluded if they reported accumulation of HES in the serum/plasma only (e.g., pharmacokinetics studies) or if they reported effects of HES only on cell/tissue activation, function, adhesion, etc., with no indication in the title or abstract that data specifically on HES accumulation were also presented. In cases of uncertainty, the article was retained for full-text analysis. Any articles meeting exclusion criteria during full-text analysis were rejected from the evidence base. Reference lists were screened to identify studies not captured in the initial search.

Data extraction and assessment

For all articles that met the eligibility criteria, the full texts were examined and the following characteristics were extracted: type of study, study population/setting, protocol details, objectives, primary and comparator interventions (HES type, controls), results (histological findings, HES concentrations in organs, etc.), conclusions, and limitations. At this point, articles duplicating findings already reported elsewhere in the evidence base were removed. Study quality was assessed on the basis of investigational design, the use of specific methods for localizing or quantifying HES in tissues such as immunoelectron microscopy, immunohistochemistry, or enzymatic assays of tissue extracts, and supplementary evidence supporting the specificity of the observed HES storage.

Results

Search results

Our search yielded 700 records, of which 654 were excluded because they did not meet the inclusion criteria or matched at least one exclusion criterion. Forty-six full-text articles were then examined, including 12 identified from reference lists. A further ten articles were excluded because they did not contain original data on accumulation of HES, were performed in vitro, consisted of opinion-based commentaries, or were confounded by co-administration of dextran or cyclosporin A. Figure 1 shows the flow of information through the different phases of the systematic literature review, culminating in the selection of 48 articles on HES accumulation for inclusion in this review [2-49]. Those papers, which provided the evidence base for this review, described 37 human (Table 1) and 11 animal (Table 3 in the Electronic Supplementary Material) studies.
Fig. 1

Process of study selection

Table 1

Human studies of HES storage

Reference n DesignIndicationSolutionDosea Tissue distributionOutcome
Jesch et al. [4]12OSSurgery6 % HES 450/0.71.0Hepatic parenchymal, Kupffer and small bile duct cells, and interstitial histiocytes
Pfeifer et al. [5]3CRDialysis6 % HES 70/0.56.8Hepatic 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 patientDevelopment of ascites
Dienes et al. [6]2CRDialysisHES 200/0.510.4Massive storage in all types of liver cells with morphologic resemblance to storage diseaseDevelopment of ascites with fatal outcome
Sirtl et al. [7]11NCSSurgery10 % HES 200/0.5 or 6 % HES 450/0.71.0Kupffer 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 [9]1CRPlasma exchangeHES 450/0.782.3Lipid-laden macrophages in bone marrowAnemia
Heilmann et al. [10]60RCTIUGR or gestational hypertension10 % HES 200/0.59.3Grade 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. [12]3CROtologic disorder6 % HES 70/0.5 or 6 % or 10 % HES 200/0.55.9Dermal macrophages and endothelial cells and cutaneous nerve fibersPruritus
Jurecka et al. [14]7CROtologic or neurological disorderHES 200/0.5 or HES 200/0.624.2Skin of all patients, mainly in macrophages, blood, and lymph vessel endothelial cells, perineural cells, endoneural macrophages of larger nerve tracts, keratinocytes, and Langerhans cellsPruritus
Legendre et al. [15]90NCSKidney transplantationHESOsmotic nephrosis-like lesions in 80 % of HES group vs 14 % of control group (p < 0.01)Graft loss in 7 of 31 patients with osmotic nephrosis-like lesions vs zero of 55 patients without (p < 0.001)
Szeimies et al. [16]1CROtologic disorderHES 200/0.53.6Dermal macrophages and endothelial and perineural cellsPruritus
Leunig et al. [17]1CROtologic disorder10 % HES 200/0.58.6Dermal macrophagesPruritus
Cittanova et al. [18]52RCTKidney transplantation6 % HES 200/0.621.8Osmotic nephrosis of proximal and distal tubules in 3/3 HES recipients biopsied vs 0/6 control patients (p = 0.01)Need for RRT in 33 % of HES group vs 5 % of control group (p = 0.029)
Coronel et al. [19]24NCSKidney transplantationHES1.4Osmotic nephrosis in 4/16 HES recipients vs 2/8 control patientsUrinary output 52.3 % lower in HES group (p = 0.075)
Cox and Popple [20]1CRSurgery6 % HES 450/0.76.5Dermal macrophagesPruritus, erythema, eyelid edema
Gall et al. [21]10OSOtologic disorder6 % HES 70/0.5 or 6 % or 10 % HES 200/0.55.6Dermal endothelial cells and perivascular macrophagesPruritus
Speight et al. [23]3CRSurgery6 % HES 450/0.70.7Dermal edema, vessel dilatation, and increase in mast cell number; vacuolated macrophages around vessels and nerves throughout dermisPruritus
Kiehl et al. [24]1CROtologic disorderHES 450/0.77.5Periocular histiocytes, endothelial cells, basal keratinocytes, and small nervesPeriocular edema and pruritus
Lukasewitz et al. [25]12OSARDS10 % HES 200/0.513.5Kidney, spleen, lymph nodes, lung, liver, pancreas, and intestineMultiorgan failure and death
Sirtl et al. [26]26NCSSurgery, vascular disease, or chronic leg ulcerHES 200/0.5, HES 200/0.62, and HES 450/0.73.5Liver 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 cellsSevere pruritus in 9/10 patients receiving >2 g kg−1 HES
Christidis et al. [27]9OSPlasma exchange, paracentesis, or dialysis6 % HES 200/0.6230.5Vacuolization of Kupffer cells in all patients and hepatocytes in 7/9; osmotic nephrosis in 2 patients with renal biopsiesWorsening of hepatic dysfunction with fatal outcome in 8/9 cases; development or worsening of renal dysfunction in 2 patients
de Labarthe et al. [28]1CRSurgeryHES0.5Osmotic nephrosis-like lesions in proximal tubulesOliguric acute kidney injury
Ständer et al. [29]147NCSOtologic disorder, surgery, and otherHES 70/0.5, HES 200/0.62, or HES 450/0.75.2Vacuolization 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 epitheliaPruritus in 39.5 % of patients exposed to HES
Weisshaar et al. [32]1CRTraumaHES1.3Dermal macrophages, blood vessel endothelial cells, nonmyelinated nerve cells, and Schwann cellsSevere persistent pruritus
Pillebout et al. [33]26OSOrthotopic liver transplantation6 % HES 200/0.62≤1.6Osmotic nephrosis-like lesions in 61.5 % of patients
Ständer et al. [34]1CRTraumaHES18.0HES storage vacuoles in cutaneous macrophages, endothelial cells, and Schwann cellsSevere pruritus
Auwerda et al. [35]16NCSPlasmapheresis6 % HES 200/0.530.2Foam cells in bone marrow aspirates of all 5 HES recipients testedAcquired lysosomal storage disease in 1 patient after 116 g/kg HES
Ebcioglu et al. [36]1CRKidney transplantation6 % HES 450/0.7 in lactated electrolyte1.1Osmotic nephrosis-like lesions of proximal tubular epithelial cellsDelayed graft function
Schmidt-Hieber et al. [37]1CRTrauma6 % HES 130/0.4 and 6 and 10 % HES 200/0.517.1Severe 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 cellsPersistent thrombocytopenia and liver dysfunction with fatal outcome
Kamann et al. [39]21OSOtologic, circulatory, and unspecified disorder6 % and 10 % HES4.3Dermal macrophages, endothelium, and nerve cellsPruritus
Chappell et al. [40]1CROtologic disorder6 % HES 450/0.712.4Bone marrow histiocytesSubdural hematoma, bone marrow suppression, and pruritus
Haught et al. [41]1CRSurgery6 % HESDermal macrophagesSevere pruritus
Jamal et al. [42]1CRSurgery10 % HES 200/0.59.2Renal tubular cellsChronic renal failure
Hagne et al. [44]1CRSepsis6 % HES 130/0.44.9Proximal tubular epithelial cellsSevere renal insufficiency persisting ≥3 years
Zhao et al. [46]1CRHypovolemia6 % HES3.5Severe inflammatory cell infiltrate in renal biopsyAcute kidney injury
Aneja et al. [47]1CRSurgery6 % HES 450/0.7 in lactated electrolyte0.5Dermal macrophagesPruritus
Kumar and Suneja [48]1CRSurgery6 % HES 450/0.70.7Proximal tubular epithelial cellsAcute kidney injury
Ständer et al. [49]70OSOtologic disorder, surgery, trauma, and otherHES 70/0.5, HES 130/0.4, and HES 200/0.54.3Dermal 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)

Process of study selection Human studies of HES storage 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)

Human studies

With a combined total of 615 patients, the included human studies comprised two randomized controlled trials, six nonrandomized controlled studies, seven observational studies, and 22 case reports (Table 1). One nonrandomized controlled study encompassing both patients and a control group of six healthy volunteers was described in three publications [29, 50, 51]. Another nonrandomized controlled study [35] included a patient who had been the subject of a prior separate case report [52]. By far the most common indication for fluid infusion was surgery, including transplant procedures, which accounted for 282 patients (45.9 %) in 17 studies. The second most frequent was otologic disorder, composing 131 patients (21.3 %) in ten studies. Other indications investigated in multiple studies were trauma, plasma exchange, and dialysis (Table 1). HES 70/0.5 was evaluated in 5 studies, HES 130/0.4 in 3, HES 200/0.5 in 14, HES 200/0.62 in 6, and HES 450/0.7 in 12. The type of HES solution was unspecified for eight studies. Investigated HES concentrations were 6 % in 20 studies, 10 % in 9, and unspecified in 13. In seven studies the cumulative HES dose administered was below 1.2 g kg−1 and in ten studies below 2.0 g kg−1. By comparison, the recommended daily maximum doses for HES 450/0.7, 200/0.5, and HES 130/0.4 are 1.2, 2.0, and 3.0 g kg−1, respectively. Cumulative HES dose ranged from 2.0 to 10.0 g kg−1 in 16 studies and between 10.0 and 20.0 g kg−1 in five studies. Higher cumulative doses were administered in three studies: a nonrandomized controlled study of 16 plasmapheresis patients (30.2 g kg−1) [35], an observational study of nine patients with liver dysfunction (30.5 g kg−1) [27], and a plasma exchange patient (82.3 g kg−1) [9]. Tissue localization of HES was assessed by light microscopy in 11 studies [10, 18, 20, 27, 33, 36, 37, 40, 42, 46, 48], electron microscopy in 3 [28, 32, 49], and both in 14 [4–7, 12, 14, 16, 17, 21, 23, 39, 41, 44, 47]. Specific anti-HES antibodies were employed in five studies for immunoelectron microscopy [14, 24, 26, 29, 35], as well as immunohistochemistry in two of those studies [14, 26]. Tissue HES was quantitated in biopsy or necropsy specimens by isolation, acid hydrolysis, and enzymatic assay in two studies [5, 25]. Immunoelectron microscopy, immunohistochemistry, and enzymatic assay of tissue extracts provide definitive evidence of HES storage. Other methods are potentially less specific. Therefore, in a number of included studies supplementary evidence was presented supporting the conclusion that the observed storage was indeed of HES. This evidence included lack of exposure to other colloids, heterologous blood products, radiocontrast agents, and drugs or of coexisting medical conditions that might mimic HES storage; the absence of storage in specimens secured prior to HES infusion or from control subjects unexposed to HES; the observation of a dose–response relationship between administered HES and observed storage; and the ability to discriminate morphologically between HES-laden vacuoles and those containing other materials [4, 7, 10, 20, 23, 27–29, 36, 37, 44, 46, 48]. Localization of HES in skin was demonstrated by 17 studies, in kidney by 12, in liver by 8, and in bone marrow by 5 (Table 1). Other sites of HES deposition were lymph nodes, spleen, lung, pancreas, intestine, muscle, trophoblast, and placental stroma. The highest concentration was found in kidney. HES uptake into tissue was very rapid. Intracellular vacuoles were localized in Kupffer cells of the liver within 30 min after intraoperative infusion of 1.0 g kg−1 HES 450/0.7 [4]. Immunoelectron microscopy revealed HES-laden intracytoplasmic vacuoles in skin within 90 min after a single 0.4 g kg−1 infusion [29]. HES tissue uptake was also cumulative, in that more extensive vacuolization was observed at higher cumulative doses (Fig. 2). For instance, light or moderate dermal HES deposits were found in 75 % of surgical patients receiving mean 0.8 g kg−1 HES, whereas storage was moderate or heavy in all ten patients of another group with vascular disease or chronic leg ulcer receiving a mean of 7.8 g kg−1 [26]. Nevertheless, HES storage and its sequelae often ensue after the lowest doses. In one study 15 % of patients displayed electron microscopy-proven dermal HES deposits and developed pruritus after receiving only 0.4 g kg−1 HES cumulatively [49].
Fig. 2

Percentages 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

Percentages 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 Some HES deposits proved to be extremely long-lasting. Persistence in skin for longer than 4 years was documented by immunoelectron microscopy in two studies [26, 29]. In another study skin persistence for 8 years or more was shown by electron microscopy [39]. One patient suffered pruritus and disfiguring periocular edema with immunoelectron microscopy-proven HES deposition in periocular histiocytes, endothelial cells, basal keratinocytes, and small nerves [24]. There was no evidence that the deposits had subsided between 28 and 42 months after HES exposure, and the periocular edema had not resolved after 4.5 years. In a study of 26 orthotopic liver transplantation patients, osmotic nephrosis-like lesions remained on average at least 6.4 years after HES exposure up to a maximum of 10 years [33]. The most frequently encountered adverse event associated with HES storage was pruritus, which was reported in 17 studies (Table 1). Renal dysfunction was another common associated outcome, documented in ten studies (Table 1). Striking evidence of the association between HES storage in the kidney and poor renal outcomes was furnished by a randomized trial of 52 kidney transplant patients [18]. In that trial HES 200/0.62 increased the odds of needing renal replacement therapy nearly tenfold. All biopsied patients of the HES 200/0.62 group exhibited osmotic nephrosis, whereas none of those in the control group did. In some instances the renal dysfunction proved irreversible. Thus, chronic renal failure after HES exposure was reported in a patient with septic shock (Fig. 3) and a surgical patient [42]. Other reported poor outcomes associated with HES storage were liver dysfunction and bone marrow suppression (Table 1; Fig. 4).
Fig. 3

Electron 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. 4

Severe 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

Electron 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 Severe 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

Animal studies

Results of the included animal studies are summarized in Table 3 in the Electronic Supplementary Material. HES was generally localized in the same tissue types as humans although bone marrow deposition was not documented.

Discussion

This review of biopsy- or necropsy-proven cellular uptake of HES in humans demonstrates that after infusion HES is rapidly taken up by a wide spectrum of cells throughout the body. The review also documents that the accumulation of HES in cells and tissue is accompanied by serious complications such as renal, liver, and bone marrow failure and pruritus. Cellular HES accumulation was shown across a wide range of clinical indications and doses. Surgery patients comprised the largest group with demonstrated HES deposits. Cellular uptake can occur within minutes of exposure to HES, and repeated dose of HES can lead to increased accumulation. While the HES deposits may eventually disappear in some cases, they can persist for years in others. Evaluation of semi-thin sections by light microscopy by multiple raters and assessment of inter-rater concordance were implemented in one included study [10]. However, reliance on multiple raters and blinding of the raters were not described in other studies. This is a limitation of the systematic review. The lack of pre-published study protocols was another limitation. Because HES is a chemically altered plant-derived substance recognized by the body as foreign, phagocytic cells of the immune system avidly ingest it. HES has been identified not only in the circulating plasma macrophages and monocytes, but also in the tissue-resident macrophages, such as histiocytes in the skin, muscle, and bone marrow and Kupffer cells in the liver (Table 1). Moreover, HES has also been shown to be taken up by epithelial and mesenchymal cells, such as keratinocytes, liver parenchyma cells, striated muscle cells, and peripheral nerve Schwann cells. There have been many reports of its presence in vascular endothelial cells (Table 1). This cellular uptake can lead to tissue accumulation and possible organ dysfunction. The presence of HES in cells becomes problematic because it cannot be readily metabolized. The immune cells take up HES by phagocytosis and the other cell types are believed to ingest HES by pinocytosis. Both phagocytosis and pinocytosis are a form of endocytosis, a process of cellular ingestion by which the plasma membrane folds inward and pinches off to bring substances into the cells. These endosomes evolve and fuse to form lysosomes, specialized vesicles that contain digestive enzymes. In the plasma, HES can be metabolized by α-amylase. However, that enzyme is not present in cellular lysosomes. Acid α-glucosidase is the lysosomal enzyme that primarily breaks down starch and disaccharides to glucose. The processing of HES in lysosomes remains totally uncharacterized. The extent to which acid α-glucosidase can process HES remains unknown, but the long-lasting accumulation of HES in various cell types would indicate that it is very inefficient at best perhaps in part because HES has been chemically altered to be resistant to degradation. There have been no reports of acid α-glucosidase’s ability to metabolize HES. The impact of storage in lysosomes can be amplified by the osmotic properties of HES. The HES molecules can create an oncotic gradient, leading to the accumulation of intracellular water, cytoplasmic swelling, lysosomal vacuolization, and disruption of cellular integrity. The osmotic nephrosis associated with HES use illustrates this phenomenon (Figs. 3, 4). The characteristic histological appearance is that of HES arrayed around the margins of the vacuole with an empty center that is believed to be aqueous. Large doses of HES can result in so much uptake by macrophages that they become “foamy”, with resemblance to lysosomal storage disease [35]. Pruritus caused by storage of HES in the skin is the most studied and well-documented HES accumulation-related adverse event in part because of the relative ease in obtaining biopsies [53]. The pruritus associated with HES administration is typically severe, protracted, and refractory to treatment; it can last for years. It most often presents as a generalized pruritus without visible skin lesions weeks after exposure to HES. In a systematic review of 18 clinical studies with 3,239 total patients, pruritus was found to be frequent after routine doses in common clinical indications, with incidence rates of 13–34 % in the intensive care unit, 22 % in cardiac surgery, and 3–54 % in stroke [53]. Moreover, the reported prevalence of HES-induced pruritus is likely an underestimate because of the delayed onset of itching and failure to consider the diagnosis [47]. No effect of HES molecular weight or substitution on the occurrence of pruritus was apparent [53]. In one included study of 70 patients with electron microscopy-proven HES deposits 80 % of patients had severe or very severe pruritus, with a median latency between HES exposure and pruritus onset of 3 weeks and a median pruritus duration of 6 months [49]. Although the median cumulative dose of HES was 300 g, 15 % of patients developed pruritus after only 30 g, and the authors concluded that HES-induced pruritus may occur at any dose, molecular weight, or substitution. HES deposits have been identified in a number of skin cell types: histiocytes, keratinocytes, Schwann cells, Langerhans cells, endothelial cells, and small nerves (Table 1). The mechanism of HES-associated pruritus remains poorly delineated but is thought to be related to accumulation of HES in the epithelia of small peripheral nerves, especially Schwann cells [29, 50]. The effect of HES on renal function has become a serious clinical concern. Recent meta-analyses have concluded that HES use in critically ill patients is associated with significantly increased kidney injury and use of renal replacement therapy (e.g., [54, 55]). The kidney is a major site of HES tissue uptake. In a necropsy study of 12 patients who received repeated HES 200/0.5 infusions and died after protracted renal replacement therapy necessitated by acute kidney injury, the kidney contained the highest tissue concentration of HES in each individual patient compared with any of the other six major organs evaluated [25]. The primary site of HES uptake into renal tissue is in the luminal epithelial cells of the proximal tubules. Because of the glomerular filtration barrier, only HES molecules below 45 to 60 kDa pass through the kidney tubules where some are taken up by the proximal tubule cells through pinocytosis. The accumulation of these molecules in lysosomes results in a classic osmotic nephrosis, a morphological pattern with vacuolization and swelling of the renal proximal tubular cells (Figs. 3, 4) [56]. The presence of HES deposits in kidney tubular cells was demonstrated in 12 reports in this review. In a randomized trial, HES increased the odds of needing renal replacement therapy after kidney transplantation by almost tenfold, and all biopsied patients receiving HES showed osmotic nephrosis, whereas none in the control group did [18]. While the structural changes caused by osmotic nephrosis can be reversible and function restored, osmotic nephrosis resulting from HES infusion can be extremely long-lasting. During long-term follow-up after orthotopic liver transplantation, osmotic nephrosis attributable to HES persisted for on average at least 6.4 years in 61 % of patients [33]. Exposure of the proximal tubules to HES and therefore the potential for HES uptake may be greater for a lower molecular weight, less highly substituted HES solution. The average measured serum concentration of small HES molecules (<60 kDa) is 2.2 times higher over the first 24 h after infusion of HES 200/0.5 than of HES 450/0.7 [57]. The impact of molecular weight and substitution on HES uptake, storage, and processing in the kidney requires further study. HES can be taken up into endothelial cells (Table 1). Currently, very little is known about the consequences of HES uptake in these cells. Since endothelial cells play important roles in both the coagulation and immune systems and since turnover rates of endothelial cells are rather low, accumulation of starch molecules could be relevant to various cell functions such as membrane recycling or other intracellular molecular trafficking. Further investigation into the effect of stored HES on endothelial cell function is needed. Some evidence assembled in this systematic review also suggests deleterious effects of HES storage on the liver. In this connection one intriguing finding of a recently reported large randomized trial was increased liver failure in the group allocated to HES 130/0.4 [58]. This review underscores that HES cellular uptake has been much less investigated and reported than the plasma presence of HES. However, tissue accumulation may be an important determinant of HES safety and needs to be further elucidated. By its very nature, tissue uptake is much harder to investigate than the plasma volume-expanding effects of HES. The need for invasive multiple biopsies limits the type, size, and scope of studies that can realistically be conducted. The water-soluble HES granules are often difficult to identify in standard light microscopy approaches. The more advanced techniques of electron microscopy (especially immunoelectron microscopy with specific anti-HES antibodies), immunohistochemistry, and enzymatic assay are more demanding and often not readily available. Consequently, large randomized trials to address this issue have not been conducted and the barriers to such trials might be insurmountable. In any case, the evidence compiled systematically for the first time in this review suggests that the potential consequences of HES cellular uptake should be considered when selecting this artificial colloid for clinical fluid management. Below is the link to the electronic supplementary material. Supplementary material 1 (DOC 52 kb)
  50 in total

1.  Hydroxyethylstarch as replacement in therapeutic plasma exchange.

Authors:  E A Burgstaler; A A Pineda
Journal:  Prog Clin Biol Res       Date:  1990

2.  [Accumulation of two different hydroxyethyl starch preparations in the placenta after hemodilution in patients with fetal intrauterine growth retardation or pregnancy hypertension].

Authors:  L Heilmann; E Lorch; B Hojnacki; H Müntefering; H Förster
Journal:  Infusionstherapie       Date:  1991-10

Review 3.  Effect of molecular weight and substitution on tissue uptake of hydroxyethyl starch: a meta-analysis of clinical studies.

Authors:  Romuald Bellmann; Clemens Feistritzer; Christian J Wiedermann
Journal:  Clin Pharmacokinet       Date:  2012-04-01       Impact factor: 6.447

4.  Intravascular persistence, tissue storage, and excretion of hydroxyethyl starch.

Authors:  W L Thompson; T Fukushima; R B Rutherford; R P Walton
Journal:  Surg Gynecol Obstet       Date:  1970-11

5.  [Ascites as a complication of hepatic storage of hydroxyethyl starch in long-term dialysis].

Authors:  U Pfeifer; J Kult; H Förster
Journal:  Klin Wochenschr       Date:  1984-09-17

6.  [Persistent pruritus after hydroxyethyl starch infusions. Retrospective long-term study of 266 cases].

Authors:  H Gall; R Kaufmann; M von Ehr; K Schumann; W Sterry
Journal:  Hautarzt       Date:  1993-11       Impact factor: 0.751

7.  Histological and immunohistochemical investigations of hydroxyethyl-starch deposits in rat tissues.

Authors:  E Parth; W Jurecka; Z Szépfalusi; W Schimetta; W Gebhart; O Scheiner; D Kraft
Journal:  Eur Surg Res       Date:  1992       Impact factor: 1.745

8.  [Hydroxyethyl starch (HAS 450/0.7) in human plasma and liver. Course of concentration and histological changes].

Authors:  F Jesch; G Hübner; V Zumtobel; M Zimmermann; K Messmer
Journal:  Infusionsther Klin Ernahr       Date:  1979-04

9.  Accumulation of hydroxyethyl starch (HES) in the liver of patients with renal failure and portal hypertension.

Authors:  H P Dienes; C D Gerharz; R Wagner; M Weber; H D John
Journal:  J Hepatol       Date:  1986       Impact factor: 25.083

10.  Preparation and evaluation of Tc-99m hydroxyethyl starch as a potential radiopharmaceutical for lymphoscintigraphy: comparison with Tc-99m human serum albumin, Tc-99m dextran, and Tc-99m sulfur microcolloid.

Authors:  S Sadek; A Owunwanne; H M Abdel-Dayem; T Yacoub
Journal:  Lymphology       Date:  1989-12       Impact factor: 1.286

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  32 in total

1.  Effects of administration of a synthetic low molecular weight/low molar substitution hydroxyethyl starch solution in healthy neonatal foals.

Authors:  Kate L Hepworth-Warren; David M Wong; Bonnie L Hay-Kraus; Chong Wang; Yaxuan Sun
Journal:  Can Vet J       Date:  2015-10       Impact factor: 1.008

2.  What's new in the controversy on the renal/tissue toxicity of starch solutions?

Authors:  Norbert Lameire; Eric Hoste
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2014-01-17       Impact factor: 17.440

3.  Focus on acute kidney injury and fluids.

Authors:  Miet Schetz; Michael Darmon; Anders Perner
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2016-03-17       Impact factor: 17.440

Review 4.  [State of the art in fluid and volume therapy : A user-friendly staged concept].

Authors:  M Rehm; N Hulde; T Kammerer; A S Meidert; K Hofmann-Kiefer
Journal:  Anaesthesist       Date:  2017-03       Impact factor: 1.041

5.  Therapeutic Plasma Exchange in Patients with Neurologic Disorders: Insufficient Evidence to Support the Use of Hydroxyethyl Starch.

Authors:  Christian J Wiedermann; Andrea Piccin; Giosue Gulli
Journal:  Indian J Hematol Blood Transfus       Date:  2017-05-17       Impact factor: 0.900

6.  State of the art in fluid and volume therapy : A user-friendly staged concept. English version.

Authors:  M Rehm; N Hulde; T Kammerer; A S Meidert; K Hofmann-Kiefer
Journal:  Anaesthesist       Date:  2019-02       Impact factor: 1.041

7.  Long-term outcomes in patients with severe sepsis randomised to resuscitation with hydroxyethyl starch 130/0.42 or Ringer's acetate.

Authors:  Anders Perner; Nicolai Haase; Per Winkel; Anne B Guttormsen; Jyrki Tenhunen; Gudmundur Klemenzson; Rasmus G Müller; Anders Aneman; Jørn Wetterslev
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2014-05-08       Impact factor: 17.440

8.  The effect of repeated stimulated granulocyte donations on hematopoietic indexes in donors: a 24-year donor center experience.

Authors:  James Szymanski; James Troendle; Susan Leitman; Hong Hong; Yu Ying Yau; Cathy Cantilena
Journal:  Transfusion       Date:  2018-11-16       Impact factor: 3.157

9.  Is the literature inconclusive about the harm of HES? We are not sure.

Authors:  Miet Schetz; Andrew D Shaw; Jean-Louis Vincent
Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2016-03-23       Impact factor: 17.440

10.  [Pharmacological therapy of circulatory shock].

Authors:  Reimer Riessen; Rubi Stephani Hellwege
Journal:  Med Klin Intensivmed Notfmed       Date:  2021-08-02       Impact factor: 0.840

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