Clinical review: Exogenous surfactant therapy for acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome - where do we go from here?

被引:0
作者
Ahilanandan Dushianthan
Rebecca Cusack
Victoria Goss
Anthony D Postle
Mike PW Grocott
机构
[1] Anaesthesia and Critical Care Research Unit,
[2] Centre Block,undefined
[3] University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust,undefined
[4] Integrative Physiology and Critical Illness,undefined
[5] Clinical and Experimental Sciences,undefined
[6] Faculty of Medicine,undefined
[7] University of Southampton,undefined
[8] University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust,undefined
来源
Critical Care | / 16卷
关键词
Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome; DPPC; Surfactant Protein; Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Patient; Exogenous Surfactant;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are characterised by severe hypoxemic respiratory failure and poor lung compliance. Despite advances in clinical management, morbidity and mortality remains high. Supportive measures including protective lung ventilation confer a survival advantage in patients with ARDS, but management is otherwise limited by the lack of effective pharmacological therapies. Surfactant dysfunction with quantitative and qualitative abnormalities of both phospholipids and proteins are characteristic of patients with ARDS. Exogenous surfactant replacement in animal models of ARDS and neonatal respiratory distress syndrome shows consistent improvements in gas exchange and survival. However, whilst some adult studies have shown improved oxygenation, no survival benefit has been demonstrated to date. This lack of clinical efficacy may be related to disease heterogeneity (where treatment responders may be obscured by nonresponders), limited understanding of surfactant biology in patients or an absence of therapeutic effect in this population. Crucially, the mechanism of lung injury in neonates is different from that in ARDS: surfactant inhibition by plasma constituents is a typical feature of ARDS, whereas the primary pathology in neonates is the deficiency of surfactant material due to reduced synthesis. Absence of phenotypic characterisation of patients, the lack of an ideal natural surfactant material with adequate surfactant proteins, coupled with uncertainty about optimal timing, dosing and delivery method are some of the limitations of published surfactant replacement clinical trials. Recent advances in stable isotope labelling of surfactant phospholipids coupled with analytical methods using electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry enable highly specific molecular assessment of phospholipid subclasses and synthetic rates that can be utilised for phenotypic characterisation and individualisation of exogenous surfactant replacement therapy. Exploring the clinical benefit of such an approach should be a priority for future ARDS research.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 420 条
  • [1] Ashbaugh DG(1967)Acute respiratory distress in adults Lancet 2 319-323
  • [2] Bigelow DB(2011)The ALIEN study: incidence and outcome of acute respiratory distress syndrome in the era of lung protective ventilation Intensive Care Med 37 1932-1941
  • [3] Petty TL(2000)The acute respiratory distress syndrome N Engl J Med 342 1334-1349
  • [4] Levine BE(1994)The American-European Consensus Conference on ARDS. Definitions, mechanisms, relevant outcomes, and clinical trial coordination Am J Respir Crit Care Med 149 818-824
  • [5] Villar J(2005)Acute respiratory distress syndrome: underrecognition by clinicians and diagnostic accuracy of three clinical definitions Crit Care Med 33 2228-2234
  • [6] Blanco J(1999)Interobserver variability in applying a radiographic definition for ARDS Chest 116 1347-1353
  • [7] Añón JM(2010)ARDS, acronyms and the Pinocchio effect Anaesthesia 65 976-979
  • [8] Santos-Bouza A(2012)Acute respiratory distress syndrome: the Berlin Definition JAMA 307 2526-2533
  • [9] Blanch L(1994)Molecular and cellular processing of lung surfactant FASEB J 8 957-967
  • [10] Ambrós A(2005)Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine is not the major surfactant phospholipid species in all mammals Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 289 R1426-R1439