| Literature DB >> 26494395 |
Philip Toner1, Danny Francis McAuley2,3, Murali Shyamsundar2,3.
Abstract
Sepsis is a common condition that is associated with significant morbidity, mortality and health-care cost. Pulmonary and non-pulmonary sepsis are common causes of the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). The mortality from ARDS remains high despite protective lung ventilation, and currently there are no specific pharmacotherapies to treat sepsis or ARDS. Sepsis and ARDS are characterised by activation of the inflammatory cascade. Although there is much focus on the study of the dysregulated inflammation and its suppression, the associated activation of the haemostatic system has been largely ignored until recently. There has been extensive interest in the role that platelet activation can have in the inflammatory response through induction, aggregation and activation of leucocytes and other platelets. Aspirin can modulate multiple pathogenic mechanisms implicated in the development of multiple organ dysfunction in sepsis and ARDS. This review will discuss the role of the platelet, the mechanisms of action of aspirin in sepsis and ARDS, and aspirin as a potential therapy in treating sepsis and ARDS.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26494395 PMCID: PMC4619098 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-015-1091-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Mechanisms in which aspirin can manipulate the process in sepsis and acute respiratory distress syndrome: Inhibit the enzyme COX, preventing the formation of pro-inflammatory thromboxane and prostaglandins. Inhibit the release of NFκB from its inhibitor IkB, preventing the formation of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines. Production of aspirin triggered lipoxin, which induces the release of NO, inhibits production of IL-8 and MPO, restores neutrophil apoptosis and promotes resolution. Increase production of NO, resulting in reduced migration and infiltration of neutrophils and reduced permeability of endothelium. 15-epi-ATL, aspirin-triggered 15-epi-lipoxin A4, AA arachidonic acid, COX cyclooxygenase, eNO endothelial nitric oxide, IKK IkB kinase, IL-8 interleukin 8, MPO myeloperoxidase, NFκB nuclear factor kappa B, NO nitric oxide, PGE prostaglandin E2, TXA thromboxane
A summary of recent cohort studies into anti-platelet therapy and sepsis/acute respiratory distress syndrome
| Reference | Design | Date | Country | Sample size | Investigating | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Retrospective observational cohort | 2006 | USA | 161 | Association of pre-hospital APT and risk of ARDS in the critically ill | Decreased incidence of ARDS in APT group but no change in mortality or number of ICU days |
| [ | Three retrospective observational cohorts | 2011 | Germany | 1) 224 | 1) Association of pre-hospital APT and outcome of patients with community-acquired pneumonia | 1) Decreased ICU admission and hospital stay with APT |
| 2) 615 | 2) Association of pre-hospital APT and outcome of ICU admissions within 24 hours of hospitalisation | 2) Decreased mortality with APT group | ||||
| 3) 834 | 3) Association of pre-hospital APT mortality in critically ill patients with sepsis or septic shock | 3) Decreased ICU mortality with the APT group | ||||
| [ | Retrospective cohort study | 2000–2009 | Australia | 5523 | Association of ASA in SIRS or septic shock and mortality | Significant improvement in mortality in ASA group |
| [ | Historical cohort study | 2007–2009 | USA | 651 | Association of pre-hospital ASA and mortality, risk of ARDS, development of septic shock and length of stay in critically ill | No association between pre-hospital ASA use and mortality but reduction in ARDS and decrease in ventilator-free days |
| [ | Secondary analysis of prospective multi-centre international cohort study | 2011 | 20 sites in USA 2 sites in Turkey | 3855 | Association of pre-hospital APT and risk of ARDS | No significant reduction in ARDS in the ASA group |
| [ | Prospective cohort study | 2006–2008 | USA | 575 | Association of pre-hospital APT and risk of ARDS and septic shock in the critically ill | No difference in ARDS or septic shock development with pre-hospital statins or ASA |
| [ | Retrospective cohort | 2010 | Germany | 615 | Association of pre-hospital APT mortality in critically ill | Reduction in mortality in APT group |
| [ | Prospective observational cohort analysis | 2010–2012 | UK | 202 | Association of pre-hospital APT and mortality in ARDS | Reduction in mortality in ASA group |
| [ | Retrospective cohort study | 2013 | Germany | 886 | Association of pre-hospital APT and mortality in critically ill | Significant reduction in mortality with ASA; there was no additional benefit from adding clopidogrel |
| [ | Secondary analysis of prospective study | 2006–2012 | USA | 1149 | Association of pre-hospital APT and risk of ARDS in critically ill | Reduction in mortality with ASA group |
| [ | Secondary analysis of cohort study | 2001–2008 | USA | 839 | Association of pre-hospital APT and risk of | Reduction in risk of lung dysfunction, MOF and possible mortality in trauma patients who received a blood transfusion in APT group |
| [ | Retrospective single-centre study | 2008–2013 | USA | 22 | Association of pre-hospital APT and risk of ARDS in patients with post-aortic valve replacement surgery | No association between ASA and incidence of ARDS in patients with post-aortic valve replacement surgery |
| [ | Observational cohort study | 2000–2010 | Taiwan | 683,421 | Association of pre-hospital APT and mortality in sepsis | Reduction in mortality in APT group |
ASA aspirin, APT anti-platelet therapy, ARDS acute respiratory distress syndrome, ICU intensive care unit, SIRS systemic inflammatory response syndrome, MOF multi-organ failure