학술논문

Plasma angiopoietin-2 in clinical acute lung injury
Document Type
article
Source
Critical Care Medicine. 40(6)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Clinical Research
Rare Diseases
Lung
Infectious Diseases
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome
Hematology
Good Health and Well Being
Acute Lung Injury
Adult
Aged
Angiopoietin-2
Biomarkers
Female
Fluid Therapy
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Prognosis
Risk Factors
Sepsis
Treatment Outcome
von Willebrand Factor
acute respiratory distress syndrome
angiopoietin-2
biomarkers
endothelial injury
pulmonary edema
von Willebrand factor
NHLBI ARDS Network
Nursing
Public Health and Health Services
Emergency & Critical Care Medicine
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundAngiopoietin-2 is a proinflammatory mediator of endothelial injury in animal models, and increased plasma angiopoietin-2 levels are associated with poor outcomes in patients with sepsis-associated acute lung injury. Whether angiopoietin-2 levels are modified by treatment strategies in patients with acute lung injury is unknown.ObjectivesTo determine whether plasma angiopoietin-2 levels are associated with clinical outcomes and affected by fluid management strategy in a broad cohort of patients with acute lung injury.Design, setting, and participantsPlasma levels of angiopoietin-2 and von Willebrand factor (a traditional marker of endothelial injury) were measured in 931 subjects with acute lung injury enrolled in a randomized trial of fluid liberal vs. fluid conservative management.Measurements and main resultsThe presence of infection (sepsis or pneumonia) as the primary acute lung injury risk factor significantly modified the relationship between baseline angiopoietin-2 levels and mortality (p = .01 for interaction). In noninfection-related acute lung injury, higher baseline angiopoietin-2 levels were strongly associated with increased mortality (odds ratio, 2.43 per 1-log increase in angiopoietin-2; 95% confidence interval, 1.57-3.75; p < .001). In infection-related acute lung injury, baseline angiopoietin-2 levels were similarly elevated in survivors and nonsurvivors; however, patients whose plasma angiopoietin-2 levels increased from day 0 to day 3 had more than double the odds of death compared with patients whose angiopoietin-2 levels declined over the same period of time (odds ratio, 2.29; 95% confidence interval, 1.54-3.43; p < .001). Fluid-conservative therapy led to a 15% greater decline in angiopoietin-2 levels from day 0 to day 3 (95% confidence interval, 4.6-24.8%; p = .006) compared with fluid-liberal therapy in patients with infection-related acute lung injury. In contrast, plasma levels of von Willebrand factor were significantly associated with mortality in both infection-related and noninfection-related acute lung injury and were not affected by fluid therapy.ConclusionsUnlike von Willebrand factor, plasma angiopoietin-2 has differential prognostic value for mortality depending on the presence or absence of infection as an acute lung injury risk factor. Fluid conservative therapy preferentially lowers plasma angiopoietin-2 levels over time and thus may be beneficial in part by decreasing endothelial inflammation.