Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
BIOMARKERS What do they tell us that we don’t already know? Michele Domico, MD Medical Director, CVICU Children’s Hospital of Orange County, California Disclaimer “But my patient is an adult” CHOC inpatient does not take care of adults with CHD Knowledge and familiarity with biomarkers Biomarker Defined • In medicine, a biomarker is a measurable indicator of the severity or presence of some disease state • Biomarkers can be specific cells, molecules, or genes, gene products, enzymes, or hormones. • Biomarkers are useful in a number of ways, including measuring the progress of disease, evaluating the most effective therapeutic regimes Uses of Biomarkers • Risk stratification • Effective clinical practice and decision making • Predictive capacity for mortality Ideal Biomarker in the CICU • Identify states of: – Low cardiac output – Decreased oxygen delivery – Myocyte strain or injury • Facilitate: – Early intervention – Improve patient outcome Biomarkers in the CICU Lactate BNP Troponin Lactate Allen. Ped Crit Care Med 2011; (12) s43-49 Lactate • Elevated in response to inadequate cellular oxygen delivery • There is no difference between adult and pediatric patients Lactate is produced when DO2 falls beneath a certain threshold Lactate Produced by Metabolized by • Skeletal muscle • Liver (50%) • Brain • Renal Cortex (20%) • Renal Medulla • Heart • RBC’s • Brain Effects of Cardiac Surgery on Lactate Levels • Bypass and Cross-Clamp – Increase lactate production (tissue hypoxia) – Inflammatory mediated lactate production • Catecholamines – Epinephrine accelerate glycolysis • Decreases lactate clearance – Impaired liver function – Decreased liver and renal blood flow DeBacker ICM (2003) 29:699-702 Transient Lactate Elevation • Crystalloid (bloodless) prime is associated with higher lactate levels after CPB • Pulmonary lactate rises up to 6 hours post CPB • Washout of lactate from regional tissues after cross clamp released Toda et al. Crit Care Resus 2005; 7:87-91 Amark et al. Ann Thorac Surg 2005; 80:989–994 Leavy et al. JAMA 1988; 260:662–664 Lactate prognostic significance • Admission lactate – Low lactate highly predictive of survival (PV 97%) – High lactate is variable predictor of mortality (16-43%) • Lactime is a strong predictor of mortality Duke JCTS 1997, Basaran JCVA 2006, Siegal ICM 1996, Toda CC Resus 2005, Jackman ICM 2009, Hatherill ICM 2000, Shemie Pres 1996, Charpie JCTS 2000, Kalyanaraman et al. PCCM 2008; 9(3): 28588 What does lactate tell us that we don’t already know Lactate is a late marker DO2 has already dropped past the critical point Ideally you would detect increasing oxygen extraction before the lactate starts to climb Lactate Summary • Adult and pediatric patients are the same • It is a late marker of inadequate oxygen delivery • Lactime is more important than a single level • Transient elevations of lactate associated with CPB – Bloodless prime, pulmonary lactate, washout, inflammatory mediated, catecholamine induced, decreased renal and liver blood flow Troponin Adult medicine utilizes troponin very differently than pediatrics does Troponin • The utility of troponin as a marker of myocardial injury stems from its origin specifically from cardiac muscles • Highly sensitive and specific markers of myocardial damage (cTnI and cTnT) Elevations of troponin • Acute coronary syndrome • Sepsis/ Septic shock • Myocardial infarction • AKI / renal failure • Congestive Heart Failure • Trauma • Post CPB • Pulmonary embolism • Myocardial contusion • Stroke Troponin in the post op CICU • Degree of troponin elevation correlates with – CPB duration – Cross clamp time – Cardioplegia techniques – Surgical severity – Ventriculotomy – Open chest Post op Cardiac Surgical Patient • Post op troponin elevation predicts mortality and morbidity – Need for inotropic support – Severity of renal dysfunction – Duration of intubation Immer et al. JACC 1999; 33: 1719-23, Fellahi et al. Crit Care 2007; 11(5):R106, Adabag et al. Ann Thor Surg 2007; 83:1744-50, Buse et al. Circulation 2014; (12):948-57 Troponin T measured on 1st post op day was a strong independent predictor of death at 30 days cTnT > 5.9 mcg/L predicted death (OR 10.7, CI 5.2 to 22.1) Ann Thorac Surg 2006; 82:1643-9 Can you have the double whammy of congenital heart disease (CHD) and coronary artery disease (CAD) simultaneously? • Number of adult congenital heart disease patients (ACHD) increases by 5% per year – Greater than 1 million individuals in the US • HTN, hyperlipidemia • Incidence of CAD in adults with CHD is 1-9% • Some CHD lesions are at increased risk for development of CAD – CoA, TOF, TGA, Fontan Coronary artery disease has been implicated as the leading cause of death after repaired coarctation of the aorta in adults CAD was detected earlier in patients with CoA versus any other CHD Mean age 48 years What does troponin tell us that we don’t already know? While we are focusing on post operative physiology of congenital heart disease… it can redirect our focus to myocardial perfusion particularly in adults with CHD and undiagnosed CAD Troponin Summary • Elevated troponin levels will be observed after almost every cardiac surgery • Your troponin level trend over time is important – in the ACHD patient and pediatric patient • CAD can coexist with CHD (CoA, TOF, TGA, Fontan) • Rising troponin should prompt further investigation B-type natriuretic peptide • BNP identified in 1988 • Secreted by ventricular myocytes – Volume or pressure load • Mechanism of action – Increases cGMP • Physiologic actions – Diuresis, natriuresis – Vasodilation – Inhibit R-A-A system B-type natriuretic peptide Domico. Ped Crit Care Med 2011; 12 (4): s33-42 Elevation of BNP levels Cardiac Etiology Non-Cardiac Etiology Congestive heart failure Acute coronary syndrome Cardiomyopathy Myocarditis Congenital heart disease Kawasaki disease Atrial fibrillation/ flutter Diastolic dysfunction Anthracycline toxicity Acute OHT rejection Sepsis/ Septic Shock Pulmonary embolus Pulmonary hypertension ARDS Pneumonia COPD with cor pulmonale Sleep apnea Renal failure Hyperthyroidism Dexamethasone administration Domico. Ped Crit Care Med 2011; 12 (4): s33-42 BNP in adults • Integral biomarker for over 15 years in heart disease • Successfully used as pre-op risk stratification – Level 1 A evidence • Used to guide therapy in CHF • Predischarge BNP level > 700 pg/ml is a predictor of death or readmission after decompensated CHF Karthikeyan. JACC 2009; 54: 1599-606, Ryding. Anesthes 2009; 111: 311-9 Rodseth. Anaesth 2008; 63: 1266-33, Logeart. JACC 2004; 43:635-41 BNP as a prognostic biomarker in children with CHD • Can we prospectively identify those more likely to have a poor outcome or complicated post operative course? Amirnovin JTCVS 2012, Walsh JTCVS 2008, Hsu JCTVS 2008, Hsu JCTVS 2007, Shih JCTVS 2006, Nieder CHD 2010, Cantinotti PCCM 2013, Nahum IMAJ 2013, Highest BNP levels in the CICU • LV systolic dysfunction – 500 – 1,000 + pg/ml • Diastolic dysfunction • Volume overload lesions – 200- 500 pg/ml • Pressure overload – < 100 pg/ml *caveat* sepsis may be the highest Domico. Ped Crit Care Med 2008; 9(5): 478-83 BNP levels • Pediatric • Adults • > 100 pg/ml = CHF • > 200 pg/ml in healthy neonates • > 500 pg/ml in children with CHD Maisel. Crit Path Cardiol 2002; 1:67-73 Law. JACC 2009; 23:161-65 Why are pediatric BNP levels higher than adults who are equally ill? Adult BNP > 100 pg/ml everyone worries Pediatric BNP level the same everyone relaxes Is there any “burn out” of BNP in adults? BNP in the Cardiac ICU • Levels vary depending on – structure and severity of heart disease – Age of patient • Concentrations change at various time points – Pre vs post operative • Absolute number may not be as useful as overall trend for any particular patient How useful is BNP in the acute setting? (in the CICU) BNP is used as “early warning” biomarker in sepsis Paratz et al. Crit Care Med 2014; (42)9:2029-36 B-type Natriuretic Peptide Can BNP identify alterations in volume or pressure load on the myocardium before the ECHO or the astute bedside clinician? BNP clinical scenario • Term baby • Unbal AVC, small left ventricle, AA, MA, hypoplastic ascending aorta, interrupted IVC, left atrial isomerism, malrotation • Pre-op BNP 913 pg/ml • Norwood/ 3.5 BTS • Open chest BNP clinical scenarios • Chest closed POD 2 • Extubated POD 3 – Sat 80% on RA • Off all vasoatives POD 4 • Feeds started slowly, gut monitored POD 4 • ECHO mild-mod AVVR and low-nl function POD 5 • BNP 1999 on POD 6 (first post-op level) • Plan to repeat BNP in a few days BNP clinical scenarios • Within 48 hours baby was irritable • Feeds held. KUB unremarkable • Arrest a few hours later – Unable to resuscitate • Mortality review – Autopsy is inconclusive – Only the BNP level was abnormal • No NIRS placed, no blood gas obtained (no indwelling PICC line) What does BNP tell us that we don’t already know? There may be some hemodynamic alterations affecting the heart which have not (yet) been identified by ECHO or other testing BNP Summary • Useful for preoperative risk stratification • Levels vary depending on structure and severity of heart disease • ? Can potentially be used as an “early warning” biomarker for myocardial stress / strain before an ECHO or other imaging is obtained Limitations of Biomarkers Lactate, Troponin, BNP The use of these markers as a single measurement is handicapped by the wide variety of clinical scenarios in which they can be elevated Biomarkers Conclusions • Very high immediately post op reassess patient • Overall trend more useful • Persistent or rising level more important than initial high level • Low level is not necessarily reassuring • One of a cluster of markers, but may be able to alert clinician to new evolving process Thank You Lake Villarica, Southern Chile