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Leukodepletion reduces renal injury in coronary revascularization: a prospective randomized study

Leukodepletion reduces renal injury in coronary revascularization: a prospective randomized study
Leukodepletion reduces renal injury in coronary revascularization: a prospective randomized study
Background: cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is an important contributor to renal failure, which is a well-recognized complication after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). Leukodepletion reduces CPB-associated inflammation and resultant end-organ injuries. However, its effectiveness in renal protection has not been evaluated in a prospective randomized clinical setting.
Methods: forty low-risk patients awaiting elective CABG with normal preoperative cardiac and renal function were prospectively randomized into those undergoing nonpulsatile CPB without (group A: N = 20) and with leukodepletion (group B: N = 20). Renal glomerular and tubular injury were assessed by urinary excretion of microalbumin and retinol binding protein (RBP) indexed to creatinine (Cr), respectively. Daily measurements were taken from admission to postoperative day 5. Fluid balance, serum creatinine, and blood urea were also monitored.
Results: no mortality or renal complication occurred. Both groups had similar demographic makeups, Parsonnet scores, extents of coronary revascularization and, durations of CPB and aortic cross-clamping. Daily fluid balance, serum creatinine, and blood urea remained comparable in both groups throughout the study period. From equal preoperative values, a significantly higher release of urinary RBP:Cr (7,807 ± 2,227 vs 3,942 ± 2,528; p < 0.001) and urinary microalbumin:Cr (59.4 ± 38.0 vs 4.7 ± 6.7; p < 0.0001) occurred in group A, peaking on day 1 before returning to approximate baseline levels.
Conclusions: although clinically overt renal complications were absent, sensitive indicators revealed significantly more injury to both renal tubules and glomeruli after nonpulsatile CPB without leukodepletion. These data suggest that leukocytes play an important role in post-CPB renal dysfunction, and leukodepletion may offer some renal protection in low-risk patients during CABG.
0003-4975
372-377
Tang, Augustine T.M.
2f44db5d-b12a-4911-b269-3f68b4d82a82
Alexiou, Christos
b27e0d9e-c03a-45ed-a5f3-9d5ef2028a87
Hsu, Jeff
715dae48-68c2-4d62-9a71-0f64acb21aaa
Sheppard, Stuart V.
23f30f9e-130d-4664-bb68-eb513ab77144
Haw, Marcus P.
de1cf3ff-7184-4e05-af6b-5a90085a8eba
Ohri, Sunil K.
8aa5698c-78cf-4f59-a5af-5afa46f0348c
Tang, Augustine T.M.
2f44db5d-b12a-4911-b269-3f68b4d82a82
Alexiou, Christos
b27e0d9e-c03a-45ed-a5f3-9d5ef2028a87
Hsu, Jeff
715dae48-68c2-4d62-9a71-0f64acb21aaa
Sheppard, Stuart V.
23f30f9e-130d-4664-bb68-eb513ab77144
Haw, Marcus P.
de1cf3ff-7184-4e05-af6b-5a90085a8eba
Ohri, Sunil K.
8aa5698c-78cf-4f59-a5af-5afa46f0348c

Tang, Augustine T.M., Alexiou, Christos, Hsu, Jeff, Sheppard, Stuart V., Haw, Marcus P. and Ohri, Sunil K. (2002) Leukodepletion reduces renal injury in coronary revascularization: a prospective randomized study. The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 74 (2), 372-377. (doi:10.1016/S0003-4975(02)03715-3).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is an important contributor to renal failure, which is a well-recognized complication after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). Leukodepletion reduces CPB-associated inflammation and resultant end-organ injuries. However, its effectiveness in renal protection has not been evaluated in a prospective randomized clinical setting.
Methods: forty low-risk patients awaiting elective CABG with normal preoperative cardiac and renal function were prospectively randomized into those undergoing nonpulsatile CPB without (group A: N = 20) and with leukodepletion (group B: N = 20). Renal glomerular and tubular injury were assessed by urinary excretion of microalbumin and retinol binding protein (RBP) indexed to creatinine (Cr), respectively. Daily measurements were taken from admission to postoperative day 5. Fluid balance, serum creatinine, and blood urea were also monitored.
Results: no mortality or renal complication occurred. Both groups had similar demographic makeups, Parsonnet scores, extents of coronary revascularization and, durations of CPB and aortic cross-clamping. Daily fluid balance, serum creatinine, and blood urea remained comparable in both groups throughout the study period. From equal preoperative values, a significantly higher release of urinary RBP:Cr (7,807 ± 2,227 vs 3,942 ± 2,528; p < 0.001) and urinary microalbumin:Cr (59.4 ± 38.0 vs 4.7 ± 6.7; p < 0.0001) occurred in group A, peaking on day 1 before returning to approximate baseline levels.
Conclusions: although clinically overt renal complications were absent, sensitive indicators revealed significantly more injury to both renal tubules and glomeruli after nonpulsatile CPB without leukodepletion. These data suggest that leukocytes play an important role in post-CPB renal dysfunction, and leukodepletion may offer some renal protection in low-risk patients during CABG.

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Published date: August 2002

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 26014
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/26014
ISSN: 0003-4975
PURE UUID: 7968c63a-057f-4349-84b5-7aabc6c8387f

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Date deposited: 20 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:07

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Contributors

Author: Augustine T.M. Tang
Author: Christos Alexiou
Author: Jeff Hsu
Author: Stuart V. Sheppard
Author: Marcus P. Haw
Author: Sunil K. Ohri

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