Abstract

The characteristics of circulating inflammatory cells (leukocytes) in patients undergoing heart surgery remains poorly understood. Recently, neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and specific monocyte subsets (based on CD14/CD16 expression) have been suggested as markers of inflammation and predictors of outcomes. The present study aims to characterize the influence cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass has on specific circulating leukocytes. All enrolled patients had blood samples taken pre- (0 days), early post- (5 days), and late post- (90 days) surgery. Complete blood counts were performed and whole leukocyte isolations were obtained from blood samples and analyzed with flow cytometry. Fluorophore-linked antibodies (CD45, CD11b, CD14, and CD16) were added to the blood cell isolations and later assessed by flow cytometry. Seventeen patients were enrolled and samples obtained at 0, 5, and 90 days. We demonstrated a significant increase in NLR (2.2-fold; p = 0.0028) and CD16 mean fluorescence index (MFI-measure fluorescence intensity shift of CD16 in a gated cell population) early at day 5 (2.0-fold; p = 0.0051). Both NLR and CD16 MFI levels generally returned to normal by day 90. There was a significant positive correlation between NLR and CD16 MFI (r2 = 0.29; p = 0.0064). Adverse cardiovascular event (AE) was defined as prolonged length of hospitalization or readmission to hospital for cardiac reasons after discharge was seen in 59% of patients (no deaths occurred). In an unadjusted analysis of AE, we identified NLR as a likely predictor of AE, which meant that patients developing AE had a significantly higher baseline NLR (p = 0.0065), something that was not observed with CD16 MFI (p = 0.2541). Cardiac surgery is associated with a significant increase in NLR and CD16 MFI (non-classical monocytes) early after surgery corresponding to the early inflammatory phase after surgery. Furthermore, we have, for the first time, identified a significant correlation between NLR and CD16 MFI. While the mechanism for this relationship remains unclear, our findings support the use of a simple test of NLR as a biomarker of inflammation for predicting outcomes in cardiac surgery patients.

Highlights

  • The role of inflammation and its effector cells in patients undergoing heart surgery remains poorly understood

  • When we looked at individual patient samples (Figure 5), one can see that increases in CD16 mean fluorescence index (MFI) at day 5 are consistent despite different pre-surgery CD16 expression levels

  • Neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) was used as a marker of cellular inflammatory changes that occur in a group of patients undergoing heart surgery for the treatment of ischemic heart disease with the majority of patients having suffered an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) within 21 days of surgery

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Summary

Introduction

The role of inflammation and its effector cells (circulating leukocytes) in patients undergoing heart surgery remains poorly understood. Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), which is used extensively in patients undergoing heart surgery, has often been suggested as an important inflammatory stimulus responsible for significant changes in leukocytes that remain poorly defined [6,7,8]. Neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) obtained from patients prior to surgery has been reported to be an independent predictor for the development of adverse events in patients undergoing cardiac surgery [1, 2, 5] This is true for patients with acute coronary events and not specific to heart surgery, suggesting that NLR may represent a measure of the burden of inflammation in patients [9]. The present study aims to characterize the influence cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass has on specific circulating leukocytes

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