| Literature DB >> 27433475 |
Martin Sauer1, Jens Altrichter2, Cristof Haubner1, Annette Pertschy3, Thomas Wild4, Fanny Doß4, Thomas Mencke1, Maren Thomsen1, Johannes Ehler1, Jörg Henschel2, Sandra Doß4, Stephanie Koch4, Georg Richter1, Gabriele Nöldge-Schomburg1, Steffen R Mitzner5.
Abstract
Purpose. Granulocyte transfusions have been used to treat immune cell dysfunction in sepsis. A granulocyte bioreactor for the extracorporeal treatment of sepsis was tested in a prospective clinical study focusing on the dosage of norepinephrine in patients and influence on dynamic and cell based liver tests during extracorporeal therapies. Methods and Patients. Ten patients with severe sepsis were treated twice within 72 h with the system containing granulocytes from healthy donors. Survival, physiologic parameters, extended hemodynamic measurement, and the indocyanine green plasma disappearance rate (PDR) were monitored. Plasma of patients before and after extracorporeal treatments were tested with a cell based biosensor for analysis of hepatotoxicity. Results. The observed mortality rate was 50% during stay in hospital. During the treatments, the norepinephrine-dosage could be significantly reduced while mean arterial pressure was stable. In the cell based analysis of hepatotoxicity, the viability and function of sensor-cells increased significantly during extracorporeal treatment in all patients and the PDR-values increased significantly between day 1 and day 7 only in survivors. Conclusion. The extracorporeal treatment with donor granulocytes showed promising effects on dosage of norepinephrine in patients, liver cell function, and viability in a cell based biosensor. Further studies with this approach are encouraged.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27433475 PMCID: PMC4940519 DOI: 10.1155/2016/7056492
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Schematic drawing of the extracorporeal plasma separation and cell perfusion model.
Patients characteristics, illness severity, premorbidity, and clinical outcome for the study cohort (n = 10).
| Patient | Major diagnoses at inclusion | Source of infection | Organ failure | Premorbidity | Age | Sex | Hospital |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | SS, ALI | Pneumonia, bacteremia, infection of foot, and thoracic empyema | ARF, ALI | Diabetes mellitus, | 66 | m | Died |
| 2 | SS, ALI, and endocarditis | Bacteremia, infection of sternum | ARF, ALI, | Diabetes mellitus | 72 | m | Died |
| 3 | Severe sepsis, thoracic empyema | Pneumonia, bacteremia | ALI | Alcohol abuse | 33 | m | Survived |
| 4 | SS, colitis | Peritonitis, colitis | ARF, ALI, DIC, and liver failure | Chronic heart failure | 78 | m | Died |
| 5 | SS, ALI | Pneumonia, urinary tract infection | ARF, ALI | IHD, immunosuppression | 59 | m | Survived |
| 6 | SS, spondylodiscitis | Pneumonia, bacteremia, spondylodiscitis, and infection of arm | Liver failure, ALI, and ARF | COPD | 67 | m | Died |
| 7 | SS, urosepsis | Pneumonia, bacteremia, and urinary tract infection | ALI, ARF, and DIC | Diabetes mellitus, IHD | 76 | m | Survived |
| 8 | SS, peritonitis | Bacteremia, pneumonia, and peritonitis | ALI | COPD, alcohol abuse | 62 | m | Died |
| 9 | SS, perforated aortic aneurysm | Bacteremia, pneumonia, and peritonitis | ARF, ALI | IHD, cancer | 83 | m | Survived |
| 10 | SS, after urgent ACB surgery | Pneumonia | ALI | Diabetes mellitus, COPD, and IHD | 57 | m | Survived |
ACB: aortocoronary bypass.
ALI: acute lung injury.
ARF: acute renal failure.
COPD: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
DIC: disseminated intravascular coagulation.
IHD: ischemic heart disease.
m: male.
SS: septic shock.
Age, scores, and results of laboratory parameters, of hemodynamic monitoring (PiCCO-System), and of dynamic measurement of the liver function (LiMON-System) at inclusion or on day 1 (before granulocyte therapy) of survivors and nonsurvivors (median/0.25–0.75 quartile).
| Survivors | Nonsurvivors | Statistical significance ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 59 (57–76) | 67 (66–72) | n.s. |
| Surgery/no surgery | 4/1 | 5/0 | |
| APACHE II at ICU arrival/at inclusion | 20.5 (17.8–25)/22 (22–34) | 27 (27–33)/30 (28–32) | n.s. |
| SOFA at inclusion | 8 (6–10) | 14 (13–14) | n.s. |
| SAPS II at inclusion | 47 (44–62) | 74 (73–78) |
|
| MODS at inclusion | 8 (7–12) | 12 (11–13) | n.s. |
| Bilirubin ( | 12 (11–17) | 44 (30–145) |
|
| ALAT (U/L) | 32 (20–45) | 37 (30–219) | n.s. |
| ASAT (U/L) | 62 (44–74) | 105 (52–669) | n.s. |
| Ammonia (mmol/L) | 36 (32–62) | 39 (38–61) | n.s. |
| PCT (ng/mL) | 7.3 (0.5–43) | 10.4 (7.4–14.6) | n.s. |
| Leukocytes (GpT/L) | 18.1 (14.8–18.1) | 16.2 (13.9–22.2) | n.s. |
| Thrombocytes (GpT/L) | 159 (89–278) | 125 (47–269) | n.s. |
| Prothrombin time as INR | 1.09 (1.01–1.1) | 1.32 (1.11–1.33) | n.s. |
| Activated partial thromboplastin time (s) | 36 (33–49) | 48 (45–54) | n.s. |
| Creatinine ( | 143 (79–238) | 178 (165–213) | n.s. |
| Urea (mmol/L) | 15.7 (5.7–16) | 14.7 (13.8–24.9) | n.s. |
| Lactate (mmol/L) | 1.0 (0.9–1.8) | 2.0 (1.6–2.1) | n.s. |
| Complement C3 (g/L) | 1.1 (1.0–1.8) | 0.7 (0.5–1.0) | n.s. |
| Complement C4 (g/L) | 0.5 (0.4–0.9) | 0.4 (0.2–0.5) | n.s. |
| HLA-DR/CD-14 positive cells (expression/cell) | 6413 (5890–6970) | 8980 (7640–9590) | n.s. |
| Cardiac index (L/m2/min) | 3.5 (3.3–4.0) | 2.5 (2.5–3.4) | n.s. |
| Stroke volume index (mL/m2) | 48 (43–51) | 29 (28–39) | n.s. |
| MAP (mmHg) | 92 (84–93) | 71 (69–85) | n.s. |
| Norepinephrine ( | 0.13 (0.06–0.21) | 0.36 (0.29–0.51) |
|
| ICG-PDR on day 1 (%)/ICG-PDR/CI | 14.4 (13.3–17.2)/5.6 (4.9–5.7) | 5.3 (2.5–11.9)/2.9 (1.1–2.9) |
|
ALAT: alanine aminotransferase.
APACHE: Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation.
ASAT: aspartate aminotransferase.
CI: cardiac index.
HLA: human leukocyte antigen.
ICG-PDR: indocyanine green plasma disappearance rate.
MAP: mean arterial pressure.
MODS: multiorgan dysfunction syndrome (score).
n.s.: not (statistically) significant.
PCT: procalcitonin.
SAPS: simplified acute physiology score.
SOFA: sequential organ failure assessment (score).
Hemodynamic parameters, central venous oxygen saturation, dynamic measurement of the liver function (LiMON-System), and lactate before and after the extracorporeal granulocyte therapy (median/0.25–0.75 quartile) measured with the PiCCO-System (under significant reduction of norepinephrine; see Figure 2).
| Before extracorporeal therapy ( | After extracorporeal therapy ( | Statistical significance | |
|---|---|---|---|
| CI (L/m2/min) | 3.1 (2.3–3.8) | 3.5 (2.9–3.7) | n.s. |
| SVI (mL/m2) | 42 (33–56) | 45 (40–52) | n.s. |
| MAP (mmHg) | 73 (65–83) | 74 (66–79) | n.s. |
| Heart rate (beat/min) | 73 (67–95) | 76 (70–85) | n.s. |
| SVRI (dyne × sec × cm−5/m2) | 1510 (1150–1730) | 1290 (1130–1760) | n.s. |
| ITBVI (mL/m2) | 1060 (930–1160) | 1000 (960–1120) | n.s. |
| EVLWI (mL/kg) | 7.6 (6.8–9.4) | 7.5 (6.5–8.3) | n.s. |
| cvSpO2 (%) | 73.5 (68.4–76.5) | 71.5 (68.6–79.1) | n.s. |
| Lactate (mmol/L) | 1.5 (1.2–3.0) | 1.3 (1.0–2.7) | n.s. |
| ICG-PDR (%)/ICG-PDR/CI | 13.8 (11.9–15.6.)/4.4 (3.1–5.1) | 14.2 (12.4–17.1)/4.6 (3.1–4.8) |
|
CI: cardiac index.
cvSpO2: central venous oxygen saturation.
EVLWI: extravascular lung water index.
ICG-PDR: indocyanine green plasma disappearance rate.
ITBVI: intrathoracic blood volume index.
MAP: mean arterial pressure.
n.s.: not (statistically) significant.
SVI: stroke volume index.
SVRI: systemic vascular resistance index.
Cytokines values before the first extracorporeal granulocyte therapy, after the second extracorporeal granulocyte therapy, and after 7 days (median/0.25–0.75 quartile).
| Cytokine | Before first extracorporeal therapy (day 1) ( | After second extracorporeal therapy (day 3) ( | After 7 days (day 8) ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| IL-6 | 57 (41–159) | 78 (45–154) | 28 (26–62)# |
| IL-8 | 40 (28–53) | 57 (38–118) | 30 (29–36) |
| TNF-alpha | 30 (22–40) | 22 (19–26) | 15 (13–17) |
| IL-10 | 15 (8–20) | 11 (8–13) | 3 (3–8) |
Statistically significant (p = 0.028) compared to day 1 (before first extracorporeal treatment).
#Statistically significant (p < 0.05) compared to the end of second extracorporeal treatment.
IL: interleukin.
TNF: tumor necrosis factor.
Figure 2The dosage of norepinephrine (μg/kg/min) could be reduced significantly during the extracorporeal granulocyte treatments (Mann-Whitney U test; n = 10; median/0.25–0.75 quartile).
Figure 3Cell-count and vitality (Trypan blue-staining) of HepG2/C3A cells (biosensor-test) incubated with plasma from septic patients before extracorporeal treatments compared to plasma from patients after extracorporeal granulocyte treatments (Mann-Whitney U test; n = 10; median/0.25–0.75 quartile).
Figure 4Release of lactatedehydrogenase and synthesis of microalbumin of HepG2/C3A cells (biosensor-test) incubated with plasma from septic patients before extracorporeal treatments compared to plasma from patients after extracorporeal granulocyte treatments (Mann-Whitney U test; n = 10; median/0.25–0.75 quartile).
Figure 5Activity of cytochrome 1A2 (metabolism of ethoxyresorufin to resorufin) and the XTT-test (dehydrogenases activity in the mitochondria) of HepG2/C3A cells (biosensor-test) incubated with plasma from septic patients before extracorporeal treatments compared to plasma from patients after extracorporeal granulocyte treatments (Mann-Whitney U test; n = 10; median/0.25–0.75 quartile). Whisker.