PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Blood lactate/ATP ratio, as an alarm index and real-time biomarker in critical illness.

  • Junji Chida,
  • Rie Ono,
  • Kazuhiko Yamane,
  • Mineyoshi Hiyoshi,
  • Masaji Nishimura,
  • Mutsuo Onodera,
  • Emiko Nakataki,
  • Koichi Shichijo,
  • Masatami Matushita,
  • Hiroshi Kido

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0060561
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 4
p. e60561

Abstract

Read online

ObjectiveThe acute physiology, age and chronic health evaluation (APACHE) II score and other related scores have been used for evaluation of illness severity in the intensive care unit (ICU), but there is still a need for real-time and sensitive prognostic biomarkers. Recently, alarmins from damaged tissues have been reported as alarm-signaling molecules. Although ATP is a member of the alarmins and its depletion in tissues closely correlates with multiple-organ failure, blood ATP level has not been evaluated in critical illness. To identify real-time prognostic biomarker of critical illness, we measured blood ATP levels and the lactate/ATP ratio (ATP-lactate energy risk score, A-LES) in critically ill patients.Methods and resultsBlood samples were collected from 42 consecutive critically ill ICU patients and 155 healthy subjects. The prognostic values of blood ATP levels and A-LES were compared with APACHE II score. The mean ATP level (SD) in healthy subjects was 0.62 (0.19) mM with no significant age or gender differences. The median ATP level in severely ill patients at ICU admission was significantly low at 0.31 mM (interquartile range 0.25 to 0.44) than the level in moderately ill patient at 0.56 mM (0.38 to 0.70) (PConclusionBlood ATP levels and A-LES are sensitive prognostic biomarkers of mortality at ICU admission. In addition, A-LES provided further real-time evaluation score of illness severity during ICU stay particularly for critically ill patients with APACHE II scores of ≥20.0.