Division of Surgical Research, Department of Surgery, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
Crit Care. 2012 Jan 20;16(1):R12. doi: 10.1186/cc11157.
Following trauma and systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), the typical response is an elevation of the total complete blood count (CBC) and a reduction of the lymphocyte count. This leukocytosis typically returns to normal within 48 hours. The persistence of a leukocytosis following trauma is associated with adverse outcomes. Although lymphocyte anergy and dysfunction following trauma is associated with increased risk for infection and sepsis, there is a paucity of data regarding the impact of a persistence of a low lymphocyte count in trauma patients.
This is a retrospective review of prospectively collected data from trauma patients collected over the 5 years of September 2003 to September 2008. Patients were included if the injury severity score (ISS) was >or=15, and they survived at least 3 days. Demographic data, mechanism and injury severity score, mortality, and length of stay were collected from the medical record. Laboratory values for the first 4 hospital days were collected. Leukocyte, neutrophil and lymphocyte counts were extracted from the daily complete blood count (CBC). Patients were then grouped based on response (elevation/depression) of each component of the CBC, and their return, or failure thereof, to normal. Proportional hazards regression with time-varying covariates as well as Kaplan-Meier curves were used to predict risk of death, time to death and time to healthy discharge based on fluctuations of the individual components of the CBC.
There were 2448 patients admitted over the 5 years included in the analysis. When adjusting for age, gender and ISS the relative risk of death was elevated with a persistent leukocytosis (2.501 (95% CI=1.477-4.235)) or failure to normalize lymphopenia (1.639 (95% CI=10.17-2.643)) within the first 4 days following admission. Similar results were seen when Kaplan-Meier curves were created. Persistent lymphopenia was associated with shortest time to death. Paradoxically in survivors persistent lymphopenia was associated with the shortest time to discharge.
Persistently abnormal CBC responses are associated with a higher mortality following trauma. This is the first report noting that a failure to normalize lymphopenia in severely injured patients is associated with significantly higher mortality.
在创伤和全身炎症反应综合征(SIRS)后,总全血细胞计数(CBC)通常会升高,淋巴细胞计数会降低。这种白细胞增多通常会在 48 小时内恢复正常。创伤后白细胞增多持续存在与不良结局有关。尽管创伤后淋巴细胞无反应和功能障碍与感染和败血症的风险增加有关,但关于创伤患者淋巴细胞计数持续减少的影响的数据很少。
这是对 2003 年 9 月至 2008 年 9 月 5 年期间前瞻性收集的创伤患者数据的回顾性分析。如果损伤严重程度评分(ISS)≥15,并且患者至少存活 3 天,则纳入患者。从病历中收集人口统计学数据、机制和损伤严重程度评分、死亡率和住院时间。收集前 4 天的实验室值。从每日全血细胞计数(CBC)中提取白细胞、中性粒细胞和淋巴细胞计数。然后根据 CBC 各成分的反应(升高/降低)及其恢复情况(正常或异常)对患者进行分组。使用比例风险回归和时变协变量以及 Kaplan-Meier 曲线,根据 CBC 各成分的波动预测死亡风险、死亡时间和健康出院时间。
在 5 年期间共纳入 2448 名患者进行分析。调整年龄、性别和 ISS 后,入院后前 4 天内持续白细胞增多(相对风险 2.501(95%CI=1.477-4.235))或无法使淋巴细胞减少正常化(相对风险 1.639(95%CI=10.17-2.643))与死亡风险升高相关。当创建 Kaplan-Meier 曲线时也得到了类似的结果。持续淋巴细胞减少与死亡时间最短相关。矛盾的是,在幸存者中,持续的淋巴细胞减少与出院时间最短相关。
创伤后异常的 CBC 反应与死亡率升高有关。这是第一个报告指出,严重创伤患者淋巴细胞减少不能正常化与死亡率显著升高有关。