| Literature DB >> 35410365 |
Markus Zdolsek1, Patrick Y Wuethrich2, Michaela Gunnström1, Joachim H Zdolsek1, Emma Hasselgren3, Christian M Beilstein2, Dominique Engel2, Robert G Hahn4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The transcapillary leakage of albumin is increased by inflammation and major surgery, but whether exogenous albumin also disappears faster is unclear.Entities:
Keywords: Albumin; C-reactive protein; Half-life; Pharmacokinetics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35410365 PMCID: PMC9003982 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-022-03979-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Basic data on the studied subjects and data from the experiments
| Variable | Volunteers | Post-burn | Surgery with minor hemorrhage | Surgery with major hemorrhage | Postoperative |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15 | 15 | 15 | 10 | 15 | |
| Age (years) | 31 (12) | 45 (15) | 46 (15) | 66 (9)a | 65 (13)a |
| Body weight (kg) | 73 (14) | 95 (17)a | 72 (16) | 79 (8) | 73 (13) |
| Females/males | 6/9 | 3/12 | 10/5 | 2/8 | 2/13 |
| Infused fluid volume (mL) | 229 (39) | 281 (56) | 216 (48) | 238 (24) | 218 (42) |
| 41 (3) | 24 (5)a | 37 (2) | 34 (4) | 25 (5)a | |
| MAP (mmHg), baseline | 93 (6) | 87 (1) | 65 (6) | 78 (6) | 75 (8) |
| C-reactive protein (mg/L) | 2 (3) | 86 (20–294) | < 5b | 62 (54–167)c | 61 (21–216) |
| ‘Inflammation’ | No | Yes | No | Possible | Yes |
| Blood loss (mL) | 140 | 140 | 340 (190–1340) | 940 (640–1840) | None |
| 78 (20) | 78 (13) | 71 (10) | 105 (8) | 67 (11) | |
| Maximum | 14.2 (4.8) | 16.3 (6.0) | 13.6 (5.6) | 8.3 (5.6)d | 13.3 (4.9) |
| Reference number | 9, 10 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 9 |
Data are the mean (SD) but a few variables with skewed distribution are reported as the median (range)
aSignificantly different from the other groups (Scheffé test P < 0.05); bat the end of surgery, cin the first postoperative morning; dRinger´s lactate was also infused
Fig. 1The kinetic model used for the analysis of albumin infused as a 20% solution in 70 subjects. Here, the elimination rate constant k is split into two functions, kb and kbleed where the former represents capillary leakage
Fig. 2A Distribution of the elimination rate constant kb between the five study groups. This constant represented the capillary leakage of infused excess albumin in the proposed kinetic model. B The corresponding half-lives of infused excess albumin
Fig. 3A Predictive check based on 1000 runs. B Goodness of fit of the kinetic model; predicted versus measured dilution-corrected plasma albumin concentrations, and C conditional weighted residuals versus predicted values. The thin blue line shows the logically weighted scatterplot smoothing line for the residuals; the regular red lines indicate the logically weighted scatterplot smoothing for the absolute residuals, and the irregular black lines show ± 2 SD for the residuals
Population kinetic parameters for albumin administered as a 20% solution in 70 subjects
| Kinetic parameter | Best estimate | 95% CI | CV% | T1/2 (h) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| tv | 5.88 | 5.51–6.26 | 3.2 | |
| tv | 13.8 | 9.9–17.6 | 14.3 | 8.4 (6.6–11.6) |
| tv | 5.87 | 5.50–6.23 | 3.3 | |
| tv | 10.7 | 8.2–13.2 | 12.0 | 10.8 (8.7–14.1) |
| Surgery with major hemorrhage, covariate (0/1)a | 2.30 | 1.88–2.72 | 9.2 | |
| tv | 5.11 | 4.81–5.42 | 3.1 | |
| tv | 5.80 | 5.04–6.57 | 6.7 | 19.9 (17.6–22.9) |
| tv | 5.58 | 4.82–6.35 | 7.0 | |
| Surgery with major hemorrhage, covariate (0/1)a | 1.37 | 1.12–1.62 | 9.3 | |
| tv | 5.17 | 4.86–5.48 | 3.0 | |
| tv | 7.12 | 6.04–8.21 | 7.8 | 16.2 (14.0–19.1) |
| tv | 5.81 | 4.82–6.79 | 8.6 | |
| Surgery with major hemorrhage, covariate (0/1)a | 1.38 | 1.06–1.70 | 11.7 | |
Four different approaches are shown for the calculation of the intravascular half-life (T1/2), but only the last two consider the shortening that occurs due to blood sampling and surgery-induced blood loss
tv = typical value for the group. CI = confidence interval. CV% = coefficient of variation (inter-individual)
aCovariate means that the kb in that group becomes tvkb = tvkb * (2.178 ^ covariate value) and others only tvkb
Pharmacokinetic parameters in the studied groups based on individual estimates derived post hoc
| Variable | Volunteers | Post-burn | Surgery, minor hemorrhage | Surgery, major hemorrhage | Postoperative |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6.2 (5.2–7.1)b | 5.9 (5.4–6.4) | 5.1 (4.5–5.7) | 4.3 (4.2–5.0) | 4.6 (4.2–5.0) | |
| tv | 10.2 (7.0–13.5) | 7.5 (5.8–9.2) | 6.5 (4.3–8.7) | 32.0 (16.8–47.4)c | 10.8 (8.3–13.2) |
| tv | 3.4 (2.7–4.1) | 2.2 (2.0–2.5) | 14.0 (8.7–19.4) | 88.8 (40.8–136.8)c | 3.4 (2.9–3.8) |
| T1/2 (h) | 15.8 (9.6–22.0) | 17.5 (14.1–21.0) | 22.6 (17.5–27.7) | 4.9 (2.8–6.9)c | 12.7 (9.7–15.8) |
Data are the mean (95% CI) and derived post hoc based on the population kinetic analysis
aCalibration factor between the infused albumin mass and the increase of the plasma albumin concentration
bDiffered from the two last groups P < 0.05 (Scheffé test) after one-way ANOVA P < 0001
cDiffered from all other groups by P < 0.05 (Scheffé test) after one-way ANOVA P < 0001