Heterogeneous phenotypes of acute respiratory distress syndrome after major trauma.

Pubmed ID: 24712298

Pubmed Central ID: PMC4225810

Journal: Annals of the American Thoracic Society

Publication Date: June 1, 2014

Affiliation: 1 Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care, Department of Medicine.

MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Adult, Female, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Follow-Up Studies, Retrospective Studies, Phenotype, Critical Illness, Thoracic Injuries, Trauma Severity Indices, Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Grants: HL081332, HL103836, K24 HL103836, R21 HL112656, U01 HL081332, HL007891, HL079063, HL112656, HL115354, HL60290, T32 HL007891, K24 HL115354, P01 HL079063, K23 DK097307

Authors: Ware LB, Kaplan S, May AK, Meyer NJ, Lanken PN, Christie JD, Reilly JP, Bellamy S, Shashaty MG, Gallop R, Holena DN

Cite As: Reilly JP, Bellamy S, Shashaty MG, Gallop R, Meyer NJ, Lanken PN, Kaplan S, Holena DN, May AK, Ware LB, Christie JD. Heterogeneous phenotypes of acute respiratory distress syndrome after major trauma. Ann Am Thorac Soc 2014 Jun;11(5):728-36.

Studies:

Abstract

RATIONALE: Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is a heterogeneous syndrome that can develop at various times after major trauma. OBJECTIVES: To identify and characterize distinct phenotypes of ARDS after trauma, based on timing of syndrome onset. METHODS: Latent class analyses were used to identify patterns of ARDS onset in a cohort of critically ill trauma patients. Identified patterns were tested for associations with known ARDS risk factors and associations were externally validated at a separate institution. Eleven plasma biomarkers representing pathophysiologic domains were compared between identified patterns in the validation cohort. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Three patterns of ARDS were identified; class I (52%) early onset on Day 1 or 2, class II (40%) onset on Days 3 and 4, and class III (8%) later onset on Days 4 and 5. Early-onset ARDS was associated with higher Abbreviated Injury Scale scores for the thorax (P < 0.001), lower lowest systolic blood pressure before intensive care unit admission (P = 0.003), and a greater red blood cell transfusion requirement during resuscitation (P = 0.030). In the external validation cohort, early-onset ARDS was also associated with a higher Abbreviated Injury Scale score for the thorax (P = 0.001) and a lower lowest systolic blood pressure before intensive care unit enrollment (P = 0.006). In addition, the early-onset phenotype demonstrated higher plasma levels of soluble receptor for advanced glycation end-products and angiopoietin-2. CONCLUSIONS: Degree of hemorrhagic shock and severity of thoracic trauma are associated with an early-onset phenotype of ARDS after major trauma. Lung injury biomarkers suggest a dominant alveolar-capillary barrier injury pattern in this phenotype.