Introduction
Induced hypothermia confers a neuroprotective effect in comatose cardiac arrest patients after return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) [
1],[
2]. The results of clinical and experimental studies demonstrate a multifactorial neuroprotective effect of hypothermia during and after an ischemic insult by simultaneous suppression of multiple damaging pathways [
3],[
4].
The post°Cardiac arrest phase is characterized by high levels of circulating cytokines and adhesion molecules, the presence of plasma endotoxins, and dysregulated leukocyte production of cytokines and complement activation. The mechanisms underlying this postresuscitation disease involve a whole-body ischemia and reperfusion syndrome that triggers a systemic inflammatory response mimicking the immunologic and coagulation disorders observed in severe sepsis [
5]. Although reperfusion is essential for ultimate tissue survival, it may exacerbate cerebral injury and thus presents a treatment paradox [
6]. Mild hypothermia inhibits inflammation after experimental stroke and brain inflammation [
7],[
8]. The International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation advises mild hypothermia for 12 to 24 hours in comatose patients after cardiac arrest [
9]. In a previous study, we demonstrated that complement activation and a proinflammatory response occur during rewarming after 24-hour induction of mild hypothermia after cardiac arrest [
10]. The results of that study suggested a strong temporal relationship between inflammatory parameters and hypothermia and subsequent rewarming; however, because of the observational study design (a normothermic control group was considered unethical), it was not possible to establish a causal effect between temperature and inflammation. The aim of the present study was to analyze the effect of temperature on the inflammatory response after cardiac arrest. We describe the inflammatory response over time in patients treated with therapeutic hypothermia for an extended period of 72 hours after cardiac arrest.
Material and methods
Study population
We performed a prospective observational study in ten comatose patients successfully resuscitated from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Prolonged mild therapeutic hypothermia (MTH) (72 hours) is a standard of care in our ICU for comatose patients with ROSC after asystole, pulseless electrical activity (PEA) or resistant ventricular fibrillation (VF). The study was carried out in the Radboud University Medical Centre (UMC), a tertiary care hospital in the Netherlands, after we received approval from the local institutional review board (Commissie Mensgebonden Onderzoek (CMO) Radboud UMC). The CMO Radboud UMC waived the need for informed consent for the withdrawal of small amounts of blood for research purposes, because this small amount of blood withdrawn from an arterial catheter does not cause any discomfort or harm to the patient. All legal representatives of the patients were informed about the study details. The study was performed according to the guidelines of the National Institutes of Health and in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and its later amendments. All patients 18 years of age or older were eligible for the study if they met the following criteria: (1) comatose state (Glasgow Coma Scale score ≤6) after ROSC and (2) ROSC after asystole, PEA or VF with prolonged (>30 minutes) cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The following were the exclusion criteria: (1) pregnancy; (2) thrombolytic therapy; (3) refractory cardiogenic shock, despite the use of vasopressors and/or inotropic agents, compromising cerebral blood flow, which was one of the study objectives during prolonged hypothermia [
11]; (4) life expectancy <24 hours; (5) hypoxemia, defined as arterial oxygen saturation (SaO
2) <90%; (6) chronic renal failure (creatinine >200 μmol/L); (7) chronic liver failure; and (8) known preexisting neurological disease. The time between collapse and ROSC, the start of cooling and the start of the experiment were calculated based on data provided by the paramedic team.
Patient management
All patients were admitted to the ICU of a tertiary care university hospital in Nijmegen, The Netherlands. If necessary, a coronary angiogram was obtained and percutaneous coronary intervention was performed before admission to the ICU. In agreement with our local protocol, all patients were cooled to 32°C to 34°C by rapid infusion of 30 ml/kg body weight of cold Ringer's lactate at 4°C, followed by external cooling using two water-circulating blankets (Blanketrol II hyper-hypothermia system; Cincinnati Sub-Zero, Tilburg, The Netherlands). patients' body temperature was measured continuously with a rectal temperature probe (YSI Incorporated 401, Van de Putte Medical, Nieuwegein, The Netherlands) and maintained at 32°C to 34°C for 72 hours, followed by passive rewarming to normothermia (defined as 36.5°C). All patients were sedated with midazolam and/or propofol and sufentanil during hypothermia. Sedation and analgesics were stopped as soon as the body temperature was ≥36.5°C. In cases of shivering, patients received an intravenous bolus injection of rocuronium.
All patients were intubated and mechanically ventilated with the aim of maintaining partial pressure of arterial oxygen (PaO2) >75 mmHg and partial pressure of arterial carbon dioxide (PaCO2) between 34 and 42 mmHg. α-Stat was used for pH maintenance. The radial or femoral artery was cannulated for monitoring of blood pressure and sampling of arterial blood. A central venous catheter was inserted into the internal jugular vein for administration of drugs. According to our local protocol, mean arterial blood pressure was maintained between 80 to 100 mmHg, and diuresis was aimed at achieving >0.5 ml/kg/hr. If necessary, patients were treated with volume infusion and dobutamine and/or (nor)epinephrine.
Serum concentrations of sodium, potassium, magnesium and phosphate were maintained within the normal ranges. All patients were treated with continuous insulin infusion therapy aimed at maintaining blood glucose levels between 6.0 and 8.0 mmol/L. The hemoglobin concentration was kept ≥6.0 mmol/L.
Data collection and blood sampling
Demographic and prehospital data were collected upon admission. Hemodynamic parameters, temperature and SaO2 were measured continuously. Upon admission and every 12 hours until 114 hours after admission, blood samples anticoagulated with ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid were taken from the arterial catheter. Blood samples were immediately centrifuged for 15 minutes at 2,000 g at 4°C, and plasma was stored at -80°C until used for batchwise analysis.
Measurement of cytokines, chemokines, adhesion molecules and complements
Concentrations of interleukin 6 (IL-6), IL-10, IL-8 and monocyte chemotactic protein 1 (MCP-1) were measured using a simultaneous Luminex assay according to the manufacturer's instructions (MILLIPLEX; EMD Millipore, Billerica, MA, USA). Concentrations of intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) and vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1) were measured using a simultaneous Luminex assay according to the manufacturer's instructions (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA, USA). The complement activation products C1r-C1s-C1 inhibitor (C1rs-C1inh) complex (classical pathway), C4bc (classic and lectin pathway), C3bPBb (alternative pathway), C3bc (common pathway) and the soluble terminal complement complex (TCC) were measured using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays based on monoclonal antibodies directed against neoepitopes of the products and performed according to a protocol described in detail previously [
12]. Values are expressed as arbitrary units per milliliter (AU/ml) related to a standard of human serum activated with zymosan, defined to contain 1,000 AU/ml.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using GraphPad Prism version 5.0 software (GraphPad Software, La Jolla, CA, USA) and Excel 2007 (Microsoft, Redmond, WA, USA). Data are presented as medians with 25th and 75th percentiles. The figures show median values as black lines in boxes, 25th to 75th interquartile ranges as boxes, and minimums and maximums as whiskers. Changes over time were analyzed with the repeated measures test for nonparametric data. Dunn's multiple comparisons test was used for comparison of individual time points. A P-value <0.05 was considered to indicate statistical significance.
Discussion
This study demonstrates that hypothermia may affect the inflammatory response after cardiac arrest in two ways. First, after prolonged hypothermia, proinflammatory cytokine activation during rewarming was absent. Second, with prolonged exposure to MTH, complement activation was low during the whole MTH period. These results indicate that hypothermia may have a significant impact on important markers of ischemia-reperfusion injury in patients after cardiac arrest.
The proinflammatory cytokine IL-6 remained stable during 72 hours of MTH and decreased after rewarming. This finding is in contrast to the rise in IL-6 during rewarming after 24 hours of hypothermia [
10]. The proinflammatory chemokines IL-8 and MCP-1, as well as the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10, also decreased during 72 hours of MTH and rewarming. These data suggest that a proinflammatory effect of rewarming is mitigated after prolonged hypothermia. Currently, only a small number of studies have been conducted in which researchers measured inflammatory mediators during hypothermia and rewarming, and these studies produced conflicting results and involved different types of acute brain injury, possibly with similar pathophysiogical bases [
13].
MTH resulted in decreased mRNA expression of typical cerebral inflammatory mediators (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-10, tumor necrosis factor α and ICAM-1) after experimental VF in pigs [
14]. However, in a clinical study, Fries
et al. demonstrated significantly increased systemic IL-6 levels [
15]. Altogether, these studies were focused on the inflammatory response during hypothermia, not during rewarming. The proinflammatory response of rewarming has been described in a number of animal models and in patients with traumatic brain injury. Hypothermia and subsequent rewarming were studied in a murine model of trauma, hemorrhage and subsequent fracture fixation [
16]. Rewarming before fracture stabilization was associated with more pronounced IL-6 and MCP-1 increases without affecting the anti-inflammatory response. In a rat model of mild hypothermia and hemorrhagic shock, rewarming resulted in higher synthesis of reactive oxygen species from peritoneal phagocytes and increased circulating levels of nitric oxide, with no effects on pro- or anti-inflammatory cytokine production [
17]. Hypothermia decreased IL-6 concentrations in patients after severe traumatic brain injury [
18], similar to the findings in our present study. Rewarming of patients with brain injury after 4 to 9 days of hypothermia resulted in a further decrease in IL-6 in patients whose clinical course improved. In contrast, rewarming increased IL-6 concentrations in patients with poor outcomes. This differential response of IL-6 to rewarming in patients with a poor or favorable outcome could not be determined in our cohort of patients, which is probably due to the small number of patients or the different underlying pathophysiology (brain death versus cardiac arrest).
A number of mechanisms may explain the blunted proinflammatory response on rewarming after prolonged hypothermia. Hypothermia has been reported to decrease leukocyte count and function, and prolonged hypothermia has been linked to a sustained impairment of neutrophil function. Neutrophil and monocyte chemotaxis, migration, phagocytosis and oxidative metabolism
in vitro were markedly reduced at 29°C versus 37°C. Neutrophil oxidative function is impaired at 33°C
in vivo[
19]. Alternatively, we hypothesize that an anti-inflammatory response is mounted simultaneously with the proinflammatory response, presumably to curtail inflammation and prevent collateral tissue damage. This anti-inflammatory response may be comparable to the immunoparalytic effect seen in septic patients [
20]. Reduced monocyte and leukocyte activity may thus result in failure to induce a proinflammatory reaction at day 3 after cardiac arrest.
ICAM
-1 is an endothelial adhesion molecule of the immunoglobulin gene superfamily and is involved in the cascade of leukocyte rolling on the activated endothelial blood vessel walls, neutrophil activation, adherence to endothelial cells and transmigration into the interstitium. Our present study confirms that ischemia-reperfusion injury such as that found in cardiac arrest survivors induces ICAM-1 concentration in both humans and laboratory animals [
10],[
21]-[
25]. We previously measured a significant increase in plasma ICAM-1 during a modest increase in temperature during rewarming after 24 hours of MTH [
10]. However, after 72 hours of MTH, no subsequent increase in ICAM-1 was measured during rewarming, suggesting a blunted inflammatory response during prolonged hypothermia. This suppressed ICAM-1 production is most likely the result of hypothermia-mediated, decreased ICAM-1 production at the transcriptional level [
7],[
8],[
26]. As ICAM-1 expression is enhanced by proinflammatory cytokines, the production of ICAM-1 will be further reduced in these patients because proinflammatory stimulation of ICAM-1 is diminished during hypothermia.
Complement is an important component of the innate immune system and a key player in ischemia-reperfusion injury [
6],[
27]. Böttiger
et al. demonstrated significant systemic increases in the complement activation products C3a and SC5b-9 (TCC) during resuscitation and early reperfusion in adult humans, which returned to baseline levels within 48 hours after ROSC [
21]. Complement activation is largely temperature-dependent
in vitro. The slow, ongoing, spontaneous hydrolysis of the alternative pathway is efficiently inhibited by lowering the temperature. This would also be the case
in vivo. Thus, during hypothermia, the concentration of activation products was reduced, including TCC, the terminal component of complement activation. Rewarming after 72 hours resulted in reactivation of the complement system with increased TCC concentrations and certain other activation products. Our results show that prolonged hypothermia seemed to suppress complement activation during the whole hypothermia period. The increased complement activity seen during rewarming was most likely caused by the increase in temperature
per se. A possible additional effect induced by circulatory molecules activating the system cannot be excluded, but this activation was not accompanied by an inflammatory response, as discussed above for the cytokines.
The present study has several limitations. The number of studied patients is small. This may have contributed to the wide range in concentrations of various cytokines, chemokines and other proteins. It also suggests variable inflammatory profiles among the ten included patients. This could be related to heterogeneity in genetic factors of the immune system and/or to the variation in duration until ROSC. A longer duration of resuscitation leads to more ischemia-reperfusion damage and a subsequent stronger immunological response. The different pathophysiological mechanisms leading to the arrest of circulation (PEA, VF, ventricular tachycardia, asystole) could also have played a confounding role by affecting the inflammatory response. However, we found no differences in the immune response between different primary rhythms.
We describe several strong temporal relationships between activation of the innate immune system and hypothermia and rewarming. The study design (a longitudinal observational study without a control group) prohibits definite conclusions about the causal relationship between temperature and activation of the innate immune response after cardiac arrest. We included patients with a nonshockable primary rhythm or prolonged cardiac arrest. Compared to our previous study that included only patients after out-of-hospital VF, these patients had stronger ischemia-reperfusion responses, reflected by higher Simplified Acute Physiology Score II scores, higher Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II scores and higher lactate levels upon admission [
28]. This more severe ischemia-reperfusion reaction induced a stronger inflammatory reaction. This difference in patient characteristics complicates a (quantitative) comparison between 24 and 72 hours of MTH. Vasopressors are frequently used in patients after cardiac arrest to improve the (cerebral) perfusion pressure and avoid secondary ischemic injury. Norepinephrine is the main neurotransmitter of the central nervous system and can alter lymphoid functions. β-adrenergic receptors are present on lymphoid cells, and the stimulation of these receptors can affect the immune response. Norepinephrine increases the production of both pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines and may shift the cytokines toward a more anti-inflammatory profile [
29],[
30]. The use of catecholamines may have influenced the results of our study by suppressing the inflammatory response, which may have resulted in an underestimation of the inflammatory response during rewarming.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors' contributions
LLAB designed the study and participated in its coordination; collected blood samples and analyzed the data of cytokines, chemokines and adhesion molecules, including statistical analysis; and wrote the first version of the manuscript. JGH designed the study, analyzed and interpreted the collected data, and critically revised the manuscript. TEM carried out the measurements of complement factors, interpreted these data, and helped to draft and revise the manuscript. CWEH designed the study and participated in its coordination; collected and analyzed the data, including statistical analysis; and helped to draft and revise the manuscript. All authors meet the requirements for authorship. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.