Proadrenomedullin in the Management of COVID-19 Critically Ill Patients in Intensive Care Unit: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Evidence and Uncertainties in Existing Literature.

COVID-19 MR-proADM SARS-CoV-2 biomarkers endothelitis intensive care proadrenomedullin

Journal

Journal of clinical medicine
ISSN: 2077-0383
Titre abrégé: J Clin Med
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101606588

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
04 Aug 2022
Historique:
received: 23 06 2022
revised: 01 08 2022
accepted: 02 08 2022
entrez: 12 8 2022
pubmed: 13 8 2022
medline: 13 8 2022
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Mid-regional proadrenomedullin (MR-proADM) is a new biomarker of endothelial damage and its clinical use is increasing in sepsis and respiratory infections and recently in SARS-CoV-2 infection. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to clarify the use of MR-proADM in severe COVID-19 disease. After Pubmed, Embase, and Scopus search, registries, and gray literature, deduplication, and selection of full-texts, we found 21 studies addressing the use of proadrenomedullin in COVID-19. All the studies were published between 2020 and 2022 from European countries. A total of 9 studies enrolled Intensive Care Unit (ICU) patients, 4 were conducted in the Emergency Department, and 8 had mixed populations. Regarding the ICU critically ill patients, 4 studies evaluating survival as primary outcome were available, of which 3 reported completed data. Combining the selected studies in a meta-analysis, a total of 252 patients were enrolled; of these, 182 were survivors and 70 were non-survivors. At the admission to the ICU, the average MR-proADM level in survivor patients was 1.01 versus 1.64 in non-survivor patients. The mean differences of MR-proADM values in survivors vs. non-survivors was −0.96 (95% CI from −1.26, to −0.65). Test for overall effect: Z = 6.19 (p < 0.00001) and heterogeneity was I2 = 0%. MR-proADM ICU admission levels seem to predict mortality among the critical COVID-19 population. Further, prospective studies, focused on critically ill patients and investigating a reliable MR-proADM cut-off, are needed to provide adequate guidance to its use in severe COVID-19.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35956159
pii: jcm11154543
doi: 10.3390/jcm11154543
pmc: PMC9369672
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Review

Langues

eng

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Auteurs

Giorgia Montrucchio (G)

Department of Surgical Sciences, University of Turin, 10126 Turin, Italy.
Department of Anesthesia, Intensive Care and Emergency, Città della Salute e della Scienza Hospital, Corso Dogliotti 14, 10126 Turin, Italy.

Eleonora Balzani (E)

Department of Surgical Sciences, University of Turin, 10126 Turin, Italy.

Davide Lombardo (D)

Department of Surgical Sciences, University of Turin, 10126 Turin, Italy.

Alice Giaccone (A)

Department of Surgical Sciences, University of Turin, 10126 Turin, Italy.

Anna Vaninetti (A)

Department of Surgical Sciences, University of Turin, 10126 Turin, Italy.

Giulia D'Antonio (G)

Department of Surgical Sciences, University of Turin, 10126 Turin, Italy.

Francesca Rumbolo (F)

Clinical Biochemistry Laboratory, Città della Salute e della Scienza Hospital, University of Turin, 10126 Turin, Italy.

Giulio Mengozzi (G)

Clinical Biochemistry Laboratory, Città della Salute e della Scienza Hospital, University of Turin, 10126 Turin, Italy.

Luca Brazzi (L)

Department of Surgical Sciences, University of Turin, 10126 Turin, Italy.
Department of Anesthesia, Intensive Care and Emergency, Città della Salute e della Scienza Hospital, Corso Dogliotti 14, 10126 Turin, Italy.

Classifications MeSH