New insight in patient response to surgical disruption in life-saving hormones

Cardiac surgery patients may experience different levels of disruption to their body producing life-saving hormones during their operations, a new study reveals.

Major surgery and critical illness produce a potentially life-threatening systemic inflammatory response, counterbalanced by an adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) and cortisol changes.

Image credit: sasint | Free image via Pixabay

The body’s stress response system, known as the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, controls the production of these hormones as a vital part of patients’ response to surgery. Still, researchers have found no simple graded HPA response to cardiac surgery.

Research by experts at the Universities of Birmingham and Bristol, published in Royal Society Interface, shows cardiac surgery causes major dynamic changes in the concentration of ACTH and cortisol and their secretion pattern.

Using novel mathematical techniques, researchers developed a model of HPA axis activity that predicts the physiological mechanisms responsible for different patterns of cortisol secretion.

They found that the HPA axis response can be classified into three dynamic phenotypes: single-pulse, two-pulse, and multiple-pulse dynamics.

Co-author Eder Zavala, from the Centre for Systems Modelling and Quantitative Biomedicine (SMQB) at the University of Birmingham, said: “We’ve found that cardiac surgery patients experience one of three different patterns of HPA axis responses following surgery, which may reflect individual differences in how people respond to this type of stressor.

“These patterns may reflect underlying physiological differences in each person’s HPA axis, but inflammation caused by surgery also appears to be contributing to changes in at least one of these patterns, the single pulse phenotype, suggesting that patients showing this dynamic could be experiencing the greatest inflammatory response to cardiac surgery.”

Researchers discovered that the different patterns of HPA axis response could reflect different underlying physiological changes in adrenal sensitivity, cortisol production and turnover. 

Co-author Daniel Galvis, centre fellow at SMQB, said: “We now need further studies to investigate whether and how these patterns are correlated with clinical outcomes. This will be critical in establishing whether we can use the patterns to identify and classify post-surgical risk.

“Our research also shows the existing model used for diagnosis and prognosis after major surgery and critical illness may not be giving us the full picture. Improved diagnostics based on individual responses could lead to a better, personalised diagnosis and targeted interventions.”

Under normal physiological conditions, ACTH and cortisol are in a state of dynamic equilibration which is disrupted by stressors such as surgery and critical illness.

Dr. Ben Gibbison, Consultant Senior Lecturer in Cardiac Anaesthesia and Intensive Care at the University of Bristol, commented: “What is really interesting about this study is that for many years, we have thought that the rise in the anti-inflammatory hormone cortisol was triggered by the inflammation itself – our work shows that this is only true in certain cases and individuals. What’s fascinating is that we can see who these people are by the pattern of cortisol that they produce.”

Researchers addressed how the inflammatory and HPA axis responses interact by sampling blood from a number of patients during and after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) surgery to generate profiles of ACTH, cortisol, and inflammatory mediators.

The profiles were analyzed through repurposed computer algorithms initially developed for facial recognition, while the mechanisms underpinning different dynamic phenotypes were investigated through a mathematical model of HPA axis activity.

Source: University of Bristol