| Literature DB >> 27497949 |
Giuseppe Ristagno1, Serge Masson1, Marjaana Tiainen2, Stepani Bendel3, Roberto Bernasconi1, Tero Varpula4, Valentina Milani1, Jukka Vaahersalo4, Michela Magnoli1, Eberhard Spanuth5, Simona Barlera1, Roberto Latini1, Sanna Hoppu6, Ville Pettilä4,7, Markus B Skrifvars8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: An intense systemic inflammatory response is observed following reperfusion after cardiac arrest. Heparin-binding protein (HBP) is a granule protein released by neutrophils that intervenes in endothelial permeability regulation. In the present study, we investigated plasma levels of HBP in a large population of patients resuscitated from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. We hypothesized that high circulating levels of HBP are associated with severity of post-cardiac arrest syndrome and poor outcome.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac arrest; Heparin-binding protein; Outcome; Post resuscitation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27497949 PMCID: PMC4976065 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1412-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Baseline characteristics and clinical factors at resuscitation in all patients and between ICU survivors and non-survivors and patients with good and poor outcome at 12 months
| Whole population (n = 278) | ICU survival | 12-month neurological outcome° | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes (n = 229) | No (n = 49) | Good (n = 133) | Poor (n = 143) | ||
| Age, mean (SD) | 63 ± 13 | 63 ± 12 | 64 ± 14 | 60 ± 12§ | 65 ± 13 |
| Sex (male), n (%) | 229 (82) | 189 (83) | 40 (82) | 109 (82) | 119 (83) |
| Shockable rhythm, n (%) | 180 (65) | 163 (71)** | 17 (35) | 108 (81)§ | 71 (50) |
| Witnessed cardiac arrest, n (%) | 254 (91) | 212 (93) | 42 (86) | 128 (96)§ | 124 (87) |
| Bystander-initiated BLS, n (%) | 158 (57) | 133 (58) | 25 (51) | 82 (62) | 76 (53) |
| Adrenaline used, n (%) | 186 (67) | 141 (62)** | 45 (92) | 67 (50)§ | 118 (83) |
| Time to ROSC in min, mean (SD) | 21 ± 11 | 20 ± 11** | 25 ± 10 | 18 ± 10§ | 24 ± 11 |
| Therapeutic hypothermia, n (%) | 202 (73) | 173 (76)* | 29 (59) | 104 (78) | 97 (68) |
Chi-square test for categorical variables; analysis of variance (ANOVA) for continuous variables
ICU intensive care unit, SD standard deviation, BLS basic life support, ROSC return of spontaneous circulation
°Data on 12-month survival/outcome were missing for two patients
*p < 0.05 and **p < 0.01 vs. ICU death; § p < 0.01 vs. poor outcome at 12 months
Heparin-binding protein (HBP) levels by age, cardiac arrest (CA) presenting rhythm, time to ROSC, and induced hypothermia
| Variable | n | HBP ng/mL |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Age, year | ||
| <59 | 79 | 15.5 (9.1–33.7) |
| 59–68 | 86 | 15.7 (9.9–30.2) |
| >68 | 80 | 14.5 (9.9–31.5) |
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| CA presenting rhythm | ||
| Shockable | 154 | 13.1 (8.9–21.5) |
| Non-shockable | 90 | 21.5 (11.4–46.1) |
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| Time to ROSC, min | ||
| 1–15 | 83 | 11.9 (7.9–21.2) |
| 16–24 | 83 | 17.4 (9.9–33.2) |
| 25–57 | 79 | 18.4 (10.8–41.7) |
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| Age, year | ||
| <59 | 75 | 14.5 (9.7–28.3) |
| 59–68 | 81 | 13.5 (9.6–31.1) |
| >68 | 66 | 15.7 (11.7–31.7) |
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| |
| CA presenting rhythm | ||
| Shockable | 159 | 14.1 (9.7–26.1) |
| Non-shockable | 63 | 19.6 (10.0–59.0) |
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| Time to ROSC, min | ||
| 1–15 | 77 | 13.2 (8.2–22.6) |
| 16–24 | 72 | 15.0 (11.9–28.5) |
| 25–57 | 73 | 17.7 (11.5–34.3) |
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| Induced hypothermia | ||
| Yes | 175 | 15.2 (10.5–31.7) |
| No | 47 | 13.4 (7.7–29.2) |
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Data are reported as median and (interquartile range). Age and time to ROSC are reported as categorical variables divided in their tertiles. p value from Kruskal-Wallis test
ROSC return of spontaneous circulation
Fig. 1Plasma levels of HBP at ICU admission in patients with or without multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS), and corresponding receiver operating curve (ROC) and area under the curve (AUC). Data are reported as median and interquartile range; p value from the Kruskal-Wallis test. HBP heparin-binding protein, SOFA Sequential Organ Failure Assessment
Univariate and multivariate logistic models for the prediction of multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS), ICU death, and 12-month poor outcome
| Univariate | Multivariate | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR | 95 %CI |
| OR | 95 %CI |
| |
| MODS | ||||||
| HBP, 0 hr | 1.339 | 1.023–1.753 | 0.034 | 1.193 | 0.889–1.601 | 0.2401 |
| ICU death | ||||||
| HBP, 0 hr | 1.843 | 1.280–2.654 | 0.001 | 1.607 | 1.076–2.399 | 0.0202 |
| HBP, 48 hr | 1.066 | 0.726–1.565 | 0.745 | 0.939 | 0.595–1.481 | 0.7863 |
| 12-month poor outcome | ||||||
| HBP, 0 hr | 1.980 | 1.170–3.351 | 0.010 | 1.454 | 0.890–2.375 | 0.1353 |
| HBP, 48 hr | 1.337 | 0.965–1.851 | 0.081 | 1.154 | 0.834–1.596 | 0.3873 |
OR, odds ratio per 1 SD increase (SD of HBP is 62.67 at 0 hr and 76.14 at 48 hr)
ICU intensive care unit, CI confidence interval, HBP heparin-binding protein, CA cardiac arrest, ROSC return of spontaneous circulation
Covariates included in the multivariate models are;
1CA presenting rhythm (shockable vs. not shockable), use of adrenaline, age, and sex
2CA presenting rhythm (shockable vs. not shockable), use of adrenaline, time to ROSC (min), induced hypothermia, age, and sex
3CA presenting rhythm (shockable vs. not shockable), use of adrenaline, time to ROSC (min), induced hypothermia, age, and sex
Fig. 2Plasma levels of HBP at ICU admission (0 h) and 48 hour later in ICU survivors and non-survivors (on the top) and in patients with favorable and non-favorable 12-month outcome (on the bottom), with corresponding receiver operating curves (ROC) curve and area under the curves (AUC). Data are reported as median and interquartile range; p value from Kruskal-Wallis test: *p < 0.05; ***p < 0.0001. HBP heparin-binding protein, ICU intensive care unit