by Arianna Piotti, Deborah Novelli, Jennifer Marie Theresia
Anna Meessen, Daniela Ferlicca, Sara Coppolecchia, Antonella Marino, Giovanni
Salati, Monica Savioli, Giacomo Grasselli, Giacomo Bellani, Antonio Pesenti,
Serge Masson, Pietro Caironi, Luciano Gattinoni, Marco Gobbi, Claudia Fracasso…
Critical Care volume 25,
Article number: 113 (2021)
Background
Septic shock is characterized by breakdown of the
endothelial glycocalyx and endothelial damage, contributing to fluid
extravasation, organ failure and death. Albumin has shown benefit in septic
shock patients. Our aims were: (1) to identify the relations between
circulating levels of syndecan-1 (SYN-1), sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P)
(endothelial glycocalyx), and VE-cadherin (endothelial cell junctions),
severity of the disease, and survival; (2) to evaluate the effects of albumin
supplementation on endothelial dysfunction in patients with septic shock.
Methods
This was a retrospective analysis of a multicenter
randomized clinical trial on albumin replacement in severe sepsis or septic
shock (the Albumin Italian Outcome Sepsis Trial, ALBIOS). Concentrations of
SYN-1, S1P, soluble VE-cadherin and other biomarkers were measured on days 1, 2
and 7 in 375 patients with septic shock surviving up to 7 days after
randomization.
Results
Plasma concentrations of SYN-1 and VE-cadherin rose
significantly over 7 days. SYN-1 and VE-cadherin were elevated in patients
with organ failure, and S1P levels were lower. SYN-1 and VE-cadherin were
independently associated with renal replacement therapy requirement during ICU
stay, but only SYN-1 predicted its new occurrence. Both SYN-1 and S1P, but not
VE-cadherin, predicted incident coagulation failure. Only SYN-1 independently
predicted 90-day mortality. Albumin significantly reduced VE-cadherin, by 9.5%
(p = 0.003) at all three time points.
Conclusion
Circulating components of the endothelial glycocalyx and of
the endothelial cell junctions provide insights into severity and progression
of septic shock, with special focus on incident coagulation and renal failure.
Albumin supplementation lowered circulating VE-cadherin consistently over time.
Clinical Trial Registration: ALBIOS ClinicalTrials.gov
number NCT00707122.
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