Association between inflammation and post‐intensive care syndrome: a systematic review

Author:

Docherty C.1ORCID,Page C.2,Wilson J.3,Ross P.4,Garrity K.1,Quasim T.14,Shaw M.15,McPeake J.6

Affiliation:

1. Academic Unit of Anaesthesia, Critical Care and Peri‐operative Medicine, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Nursing University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

2. Department of Anaesthesia Queen Elizabeth University Hospital Glasgow UK

3. Departments of Emergency Medicine and Intensive Care Medicine Queen Elizabeth University Hospital Glasgow UK

4. Department of Intensive Care Medicine Glasgow Royal Infirmary Glasgow UK

5. NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde Glasgow UK

6. The Healthcare Improvement Studies Institute University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

Abstract

SummaryPost‐intensive care syndrome describes the physical, cognitive and emotional symptoms which persist following critical illness. At present there is limited understanding of the pathological mechanisms contributing to the development of post‐intensive care syndrome. The aim of this systematic review was to synthesise current evidence exploring the association between inflammation and features of post‐intensive care syndrome in survivors of critical illness. Relevant databases were systematically searched for studies of human participants exposed to critical illness. We sought studies that reported results for biomarkers with an identified role in the pathophysiology of inflammation obtained at any time‐point in the patient journey and an outcome measure of any feature of post‐intensive care syndrome at any point following hospital discharge. We included 32 studies, with 23 in the primary analysis and nine in a brain injury subgroup analysis. In the primary analysis, 47 different biomarkers were sampled and 44 different outcome measures were employed. Of the biomarkers which were sampled in five or more studies, interleukin‐8, C‐reactive protein and interleukin‐10 most frequently showed associations with post‐intensive care syndrome outcomes in 71%, 62% and 60% of studies, respectively. There was variability in terms of which biomarkers were sampled, time‐points of sampling and outcome measures reported. Overall, there was mixed evidence of a potential association between an inflammatory process and long‐term patient outcomes following critical illness. Further high‐quality research is required to develop a longitudinal inflammatory profile of survivors of critical illness over the recovery period and evaluate the association with outcomes.

Publisher

Wiley

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