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Commentary Free access | 10.1172/JCI62972
1Vascular Medicine Institute and Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. 2Department of Physics and Translational Science Center, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA.
Address correspondence to: Mark T. Gladwin, Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261, USA. Phone: 412.692.2210; Fax: 412.692.2260; E-mail: gladwinmt@upmc.edu.
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1Vascular Medicine Institute and Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. 2Department of Physics and Translational Science Center, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA.
Address correspondence to: Mark T. Gladwin, Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261, USA. Phone: 412.692.2210; Fax: 412.692.2260; E-mail: gladwinmt@upmc.edu.
Find articles by Kanias, T. in: JCI | PubMed | Google Scholar
1Vascular Medicine Institute and Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. 2Department of Physics and Translational Science Center, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA.
Address correspondence to: Mark T. Gladwin, Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261, USA. Phone: 412.692.2210; Fax: 412.692.2260; E-mail: gladwinmt@upmc.edu.
Find articles by Kim-Shapiro, D. in: JCI | PubMed | Google Scholar
Published March 26, 2012 - More info
Massive transfusion of blood can lead to clinical complications, including multiorgan dysfunction and even death. Such severe clinical outcomes have been associated with longer red blood cell (rbc) storage times. Collectively referred to as the rbc storage lesion, rbc storage results in multiple biochemical changes that impact intracellular processes as well as membrane and cytoskeletal properties, resulting in cellular injury in vitro. However, how the rbc storage lesion triggers pathophysiology in vivo remains poorly defined. In this study, we developed a guinea pig transfusion model with blood stored under standard blood banking conditions for 2 (new), 21 (intermediate), or 28 days (old blood). Transfusion with old but not new blood led to intravascular hemolysis, acute hypertension, vascular injury, and kidney dysfunction associated with pathophysiology driven by hemoglobin (Hb). These adverse effects were dramatically attenuated when the high-affinity Hb scavenger haptoglobin (Hp) was administered at the time of transfusion with old blood. Pathologies observed after transfusion with old blood, together with the favorable response to Hp supplementation, allowed us to define the in vivo consequences of the rbc storage lesion as storage-related posttransfusion hemolysis producing Hb-driven pathophysiology. Hb sequestration by Hp might therefore be a therapeutic modality for enhancing transfusion safety in severely ill or massively transfused patients.
Jin Hyen Baek, Felice D’Agnillo, Florence Vallelian, Claudia P. Pereira, Matthew C. Williams, Yiping Jia, Dominik J. Schaer, Paul W. Buehler
Blood transfusion represents the first and most prescribed cell-based therapy; however, clinical safety and efficacy trials are lacking. Clinical cohort studies have suggested that massive transfusion and/or transfusion of aged stored blood may contribute to multiorgan dysfunction in susceptible patients. In this issue of the JCI, Baek and colleagues report that aged stored blood hemolyzes after massive transfusion in a guinea pig model. Hemolysis led to vascular and kidney injury that was mediated by cell-free plasma hemoglobin and prevented by coinfusion of the specific hemoglobin scavenger protein, haptoglobin. These studies support an expanding body of research indicating that intravascular hemolysis is a pathological mechanism in several human diseases, including multiorgan dysfunction after either massive red blood cell transfusion or hemoglobin-based blood substitute therapy, the hemoglobinopathies, malaria, and other acquired and genetic hemolytic conditions.
Blood transfusion is one of the first and most prescribed cell-based therapies. Despite the frequency with which blood transfusion is prescribed, the timing, dose, and established placebo-adjusted benefits of this “drug” have not been established. Blood transfusion is clearly beneficial in a multitude of clinical conditions, such as massive traumatic and surgical hemorrhage, critical anemia, and anemia associated with ischemic heart disease; it is also clearly beneficial as a supportive and exchange therapy for hemoglobinopathies. However, an increasing number of studies suggest that massive transfusion — defined as the transfusion of approximately one complete blood volume within the first 24 hours of resuscitation — may increase the risk of multiorgan dysfunction, respiratory and renal insufficiency, and death (1–5).
Studies in patients who have undergone cardiac surgery or experienced trauma or critical illness have suggested that the age of the transfused blood may relate to the risk of adverse clinical outcomes (1). The combined effects of storage on red blood cells have been termed the “red blood cell storage lesion.” These effects modulate membrane integrity (e.g., reducing deformability and increasing rigidity), alter rheological properties, and cause hemolysis and have been proposed to contribute in some way to the risk of transfusion of aged blood. However, the epidemiologically established relationship between age of transfused blood and risk of adverse clinical outcomes is confounded by a number of important variables. First, transfusion of multiple units of blood increases the probability that an older unit is given, creating uncertainty about the role of massive transfusion as opposed to that from a storage lesion mechanism (2). Second, sicker patients receive more units (3). Finally, O blood group units are more rare and are more rapidly depleted from the inventory, so that patients who have type O blood are more likely to receive fresh blood, leading to fundamental differences among groups in published case-controlled cohort studies that may influence outcomes (4).
In order to address the major variables confounding the assessment of risk of transfusing blood stored for a long time, NIH-funded well-controlled transfusion studies in preclinical animal models and human placebo-controlled clinical trials are being performed. While the clinical trials are underway, because of safety and ethical considerations, these trials evaluate only modest ranges of storage time as well as limited transfusion volumes and patients with lower severity of illness. It is possible that a deleterious effect of red cell storage may only be observed with the longest storage time, with massive transfusion, and/or in susceptible recipients. In contrast, preclinical animal model studies uniformly evaluate massive transfusion at the extremes of storage duration.
In this issue of the JCI, Baek and colleagues evaluate a preclinical animal model of massive transfusion (5). They report the effects in guinea pigs of massive transfusion of either fresh blood stored for 2 days or blood stored for 21 or 28 days. They found that the older blood caused hypertension, vascular injury, and renal insufficiency and that this was directly related to the intensity of posttransfusion intravascular hemolysis and the levels of cell-free, non-haptoglobin–bound, plasma hemoglobin. These findings are consistent with recent observations that blood transfusion can mediate endothelial injury and impaired vascular function as a result of the most fundamental of storage lesions, hemolysis (6–8). The beneficial effects they observe with coinfusion of haptoglobin (5) confirm a mechanism intrinsic to hemoglobin and identify a new potential therapy.
Using red cell ektacytometry and shear-stress analysis, Baek and colleagues report that red blood cell membrane rigidity increased at differing rates for human and guinea pig red blood cells as a function of storage duration (5), with human blood stored for 28 days comparable to guinea pig blood stored for 14 days and human blood stored for 42 days (which is the limit of storage in the US) comparable to guinea pig blood stored for 28 days. After massive exchange transfusion of 80% of the blood volume with leukocyte-depleted stored blood, substantial intravascular hemolysis was observed, together with accumulation of reduced ferrous oxyhemoglobin in the plasma of animals receiving old blood. While the transfusion of new blood was not associated with changes in blood pressure, old blood was observed to have marked acute hypertensive effects, which were coupled to increases in the NO-consuming properties of plasma and in vivo reduction of levels of NO metabolites (nitrate and nitrite). Interestingly, old blood but not new blood caused coagulative necrosis of the aortic arch, from the luminal tunica intima to the tunica media, and this was associated with iron deposition within the supporting vasa vasorum. Major effects on renal function were also observed, with upregulation of Nrf-2–dependent antioxidant gene expression signatures; dilation of proximal and distal tubules, which is consistent with tubular degeneration; and elevation of serum levels of creatinine. Importantly, washing the stored red blood cells did not prevent these effects, as the aged cells continued to hemolyze intravascularly after transfusion.
Given the association between the negative effects of transfusion of old blood and substantial intravascular hemolysis, resulting in accumulation of reduced ferrous oxyhemoglobin, Baek and colleagues infused the high-affinity hemoglobin scavenger haptoglobin along with the stored blood (5). Upon binding to hemoglobin, haptoglobin is cleared from the circulation via the monocyte/macrophage haptoglobin-hemoglobin scavenger receptor CD163. Based on observations that the vasoactive effects, vascular injury, and renal Nrf-2–dependent gene expression changes and dysfunction were ameliorated by coinfusion of haptoglobin with the aged blood, the authors propose that the pathophysiology of transfusion of aged stored blood is intrinsically mediated by cell-free plasma hemoglobin. These findings are consistent with recent observations that the storage lesion may relate, at least in part, to the fundamental effects of hemolysis and cell-free plasma hemoglobin on vascular function (6–8).
The new studies of red blood cell storage (5–7) support a growing appreciation that intravascular hemolysis represents a fundamental mechanism for human disease (9–11). This concept evolved from clinical trial observations that trauma patients receiving hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers developed hypertension and multiorgan injury caused by hemoglobin-NO scavenging reactions (12–14) and clinical observations of vasculopathic complications in patients with hemoglobinopathies and hemolytic anemia (15, 16). Intravascular hemolysis releases hemoglobin and enzymes, such as arginase 1, into plasma. An efficient hemoglobin and heme scavenging system, consistenting of haptoglobin, CD163, and hemopexin, sequesters these redox-active molecules. When these scavenging systems are saturated by excess hemoglobin, cell free plasma hemoglobin accumulates and extravasates within the vasculature and organs (10).
A number of NO depletion and ROS generation pathological pathways mediated by cell-free plasma hemoglobin have been defined (Figure 1). A primary effector is oxyhemoglobin, which is largely maintained in the reduced state in plasma and can react in a rapid and irreversible dioxygenation reaction with NO to form methemoglobin and nitrate (7, 17). This reaction of NO with oxyhemoglobin accounts for the acute vasoactive responses seen with infusions of hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers and cell-free plasma hemoglobin (14). It also causes a NO resistance state of endothelial dysfunction in diseases such as sickle cell and malaria (9, 18, 19). The hypertensive effects of cell-free plasma hemoglobin relate to the disruption of important NO diffusional barriers between the endothelium and the normally compartmentalized intracellular hemoglobin. NO normally is able to signal because the hemoglobin reactions are effectively shielded by a cell-free zone between the endothelium and red blood cells caused by laminar flow and the glycocalyx, by an unstirred layer around the red blood cell, and by an intrinsic NO diffusional barrier in the red blood cell submembrane (20). Accordingly, both the red blood cell and haptoglobin prevent hemoglobin extravasation into the subendothelial compartments in which NO scavenging can directly interrupt NO diffusion to smooth muscle.
Mechanisms by which hemolysis and cell-free hemoglobin can mediate vascular injury. Intravascular hemolysis releases cell-free hemoglobin (Hb) into the plasma. The hemoglobin is maintained in the ferrous redox state, which will react with NO in a near-diffusion limited reaction to inhibit NO signaling. Extravasation of hemoglobin in the subendothelial space and reductive recycling back to the ferrous state may enhance this pathological effect. Oxidation of hemoglobin, particularly in the kidney, from the ferric state to the ferryl state may further drive fenton and peroxidase oxidative cellular injury (involving the lipid peroxyl species, LOO•), leading to acute kidney injury. Free heme and iron promote inflammatory injury via activation of innate immune responses in macrophages and monocytes. Compensatory pathways that normally control these NO dioxygenation and oxidation reactions include haptoglobin- and hemopexin-mediated sequestration of hemoglobin dimer and heme, respectively. Downstream Nrf-2, hemoxygenase, and biliverdin reductase signaling detoxify heme and iron and provide catalytic antioxidant, antiproliferative, and antiinflammatory protective signaling.
The toxicity of intravascular cell-free hemoglobin does not stop at NO scavenging. Additional oxidation reactions are catalyzed by hemoglobin, heme, and iron. Reactions of hydrogen peroxide with ferrous and ferric hemoglobin drive the fenton and peroxidase reactions to generate hydroxyl and ferryl heme radicals. These oxidation reactions can redox cycle, leading to lipid peroxidation and cellular injury. Recent studies have highlighted the importance of this reaction in the renal injury that is associated with myoglobinemia from rhabdomyolysis (21), which appears pathologically similar to the kidney injury observed by Baek and colleagues (5). Downstream reactions may relate to heme and iron release from the hemoglobin protein. Heme can amplify innate immune responses in sepsis (22), while free iron can amplify inflammatory responses after the intracellular uptake and catabolism of a subset of damaged, stored red blood cells by the monocyte/macrophage system (23). These studies, in sum, highlight the remarkable toxicity of hemoglobin, iron, heme, and oxygen when liberated from the reductive intracellular red blood cell environment.
An interesting and yet to be explained observation of Baek and colleagues is that haptoglobin binding to hemoglobin reduces the vasoconstrictive effects of hemoglobin, yet paradoxically increases the half-life of hemoglobin in the circulation and does not inhibit the intrinsic reactivity of hemoglobin with NO (5). While the mechanism(s) for this was not explored, the observations are consistent with extravasation of hemoglobin and subcellular compartmental NO inhibition. The mixtures of haptoglobin used by Baek and colleagues include all three of the haptoglobin isoforms (1-1, 1-2, and 2-2), which form disulfide bonds and high-molecular weight multimers. The vasopressor effect of hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers has been shown to correlate with NO scavenging reaction rates and with molecular size (14, 17); the higher the molecular size of the hemoglobin, the lesser the hypertensive effect. It has been proposed that the large molecular mass limits extravasation. It is therefore likely that high mass hemoglobin-haptoglobin multimers will not extravasate and will exhibit reduced NO scavenging, and this is consistent with the reduced renal clearance of free hemoglobin observed by Baek and colleagues after haptoglobin infusion (5). Future studies to image labeled hemoglobin extravasation coupled to studies of in vivo endothelial NO signaling will be necessary to test the effects of haptoglobin on hemoglobin extravasation and NO inhibition in the subendothelial compartment.
The work of Baek and colleagues, in this issue of the JCI (5), supports the hypothesis that intravascular hemolysis represents a fundamental mechanism for human disease (9, 10). The hemoglobin-mediated vasculopathy and end-organ toxicity is likely relevant to hemolysis in malaria, cardiopulmonary bypass, and genetic red cell enzymopathies, membranopathies, and hemoglobinopathies. A potent role for haptoglobin in limiting end-organ injury opens the door to new therapies targeting hemoglobin and heme sequestration and catabolism. Infusions of haptoglobin and hemopexin have now clearly been shown to limit hemoglobin- and heme-mediated toxicity in preclinical models of blood transfusion and sepsis (22). These findings raise interesting questions surrounding potential protective effects of plasma or whole blood transfusion to increase the concentration of haptoglobin and hemopexin and provide a rationale for the development of haptoglobin-enriched and hemopexin-enriched blood products or recombinant protein preparations. While the high-molecular weight of these molecules provides challenges to recombinant protein generation and delivery, alternative approaches using aptamer and small-molecule technology may be successful. The design and testing of hemoglobin-binding and hemoglobin-metabolism therapeutics should be considered for transfusion of stored blood, cardiopulmonary bypass, malaria, and hemoglobinopathies.
M.T. Gladwin receives research support from NIH grants R01HL098032, RO1HL096973, and PO1HL103455; the Institute for Transfusion Medicine; and the Hemophilia Center of Western Pennsylvania.
Address correspondence to: Mark T. Gladwin, Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261, USA. Phone: 412.692.2210; Fax: 412.692.2260; E-mail: gladwinmt@upmc.edu.
Conflict of interest: Mark T. Gladwin and Daniel B. Kim-Shapiro are named as co-inventors on an NIH government patent for the use of nitrite salts for cardiovascular conditions.
Reference information: J Clin Invest. 2012;122(4):1205–1208. doi:10.1172/JCI62972
See the related article at Hemoglobin-driven pathophysiology is an in vivo consequence of the red blood cell storage lesion that can be attenuated in guinea pigs by haptoglobin therapy.