Progressive myocardial injury is associated with mortality in the acute respiratory distress syndrome.

Pubmed ID: 30138905

Pubmed Central ID: PMC6226321

Journal: Journal of critical care

Publication Date: Dec. 1, 2018

Affiliation: Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, United States.

MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Critical Illness, Biomarkers, Organ Dysfunction Scores, Troponin I, Heart Injuries, Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Grants: T32 HL007227

Authors: Brower R, Morrow DA, Metkus TS, Guallar E, Sokoll L, Tomaselli G, Schulman S, Korley FK, Kim BS

Cite As: Metkus TS, Guallar E, Sokoll L, Morrow DA, Tomaselli G, Brower R, Kim BS, Schulman S, Korley FK. Progressive myocardial injury is associated with mortality in the acute respiratory distress syndrome. J Crit Care 2018 Dec;48:26-31. Epub 2018 Aug 16.

Studies:

Abstract

PURPOSE: Myocardial injury connotes worse prognosis in the Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS), however the prognostic connotation of changes in cardiac troponin (cTn) levels in ARDS patients is not known. METHODS: We performed a study of 908 ARDS patients enrolled in two previously completed ARDS Network trials. We obtained plasma samples via the NIH BIOLINCC repository and measured cTn using the ARCHITECT STAT high sensitivity troponin-I assay (Abbott Laboratories) at trial day 0 and 3. We constructed Cox proportional hazard models to determine the association between 60-day mortality and quintiles of percentage change in high-sensitivity troponin (ΔhsTnI). RESULTS: The median percent change in hsTnI (%ΔhsTnI) from day 0 to day 3 was -58.2% (IQR -79.0 to 0%). After multivariable adjustment, participants with a 32.1% or greater increase in hsTnI between day 0 and day 3 (highest quintile) had a 2.27 fold increased risk for mortality (95% CI 1.29 - 3.99, p = 0.002) as well as fewer ventilator-free and ICU-free days compared to the lowest quintile. CONCLUSION: Progressive myocardial injury in ARDS patients is associated with worse outcome, independent of severity of critical illness. Investigation of the mechanisms underlying this relationship is warranted to guide possible strategies to mitigate myocardial injury in ARDS.