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Impact of intensive care unit supportive care on the physiology of Ebola virus disease in a universally lethal non-human primate model

Authors :
Guillaume Poliquin
Duane Funk
Shane Jones
Kaylie Tran
Charlene Ranadheera
Mable Hagan
Kevin Tierney
Allen Grolla
Amrinder Dhaliwal
Alexander Bello
Anders Leung
Cory Nakamura
Darwyn Kobasa
Darryl Falzarano
Lauren Garnett
Hugues Fausther Bovendo
Heinz Feldmann
Murray Kesselman
Gregory Hansen
Jason Gren
George Risi
Mia Biondi
Todd Mortimer
Trina Racine
Yvon Deschambault
Sam Aminian
Jocelyn Edmonds
Ray Sourette
Mark Allan
Lauren Rondeau
Sharron Hadder
Christy Press
Christine DeGraff
Stephanie Kucas
Bradley W. M. Cook
B. J. Hancock
Anand Kumar
Reeni Soni
Darryl Schantz
Jarrid McKitrick
Bryce Warner
Bryan D. Griffin
Xiangguo Qiu
Gary P. Kobinger
Dave Safronetz
Derek Stein
Todd Cutts
James Kenny
Geoff Soule
Robert Kozak
Steven Theriault
Liam Menec
Robert Vendramelli
Sean Higgins
Guodong Liu
Niaz Md Rahim
Samantha Kasloff
Angela Sloan
Shihua He
Nikesh Tailor
Michael Gray
James E. Strong
Source :
Intensive Care Medicine Experimental, Vol 7, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
SpringerOpen, 2019.

Abstract

Abstract Background There are currently limited data for the use of specific antiviral therapies for the treatment of Ebola virus disease (EVD). While there is anecdotal evidence that supportive care may be effective, there is a paucity of direct experimental data to demonstrate a role for supportive care in EVD. We studied the impact of ICU-level supportive care interventions including fluid resuscitation, vasoactive medications, blood transfusion, hydrocortisone, and ventilator support on the pathophysiology of EVD in rhesus macaques infected with a universally lethal dose of Ebola virus strain Makona C07. Methods Four NHPs were infected with a universally lethal dose Ebola virus strain Makona, in accordance with the gold standard lethal Ebola NHP challenge model. Following infection, the following therapeutic interventions were employed: continuous bedside supportive care, ventilator support, judicious fluid resuscitation, vasoactive medications, blood transfusion, and hydrocortisone as needed to treat cardiovascular compromise. A range of physiological parameters were continuously monitored to gage any response to the interventions. Results All four NHPs developed EVD and demonstrated a similar clinical course. All animals reached a terminal endpoint, which occurred at an average time of 166.5 ± 14.8 h post-infection. Fluid administration may have temporarily blunted a rise in lactate, but the effect was short lived. Vasoactive medications resulted in short-lived improvements in mean arterial pressure. Blood transfusion and hydrocortisone did not appear to have a significant positive impact on the course of the disease. Conclusions The model employed for this study is reflective of an intramuscular infection in humans (e.g., needle stick) and is highly lethal to NHPs. Using this model, we found that the animals developed progressive severe organ dysfunction and profound shock preceding death. While the overall impact of supportive care on the observed pathophysiology was limited, we did observe some time-dependent positive responses. Since this model is highly lethal, it does not reflect the full spectrum of human EVD. Our findings support the need for continued development of animal models that replicate the spectrum of human disease as well as ongoing development of anti-Ebola therapies to complement supportive care.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2197425X
Volume :
7
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Intensive Care Medicine Experimental
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.877aaa5f56994221966d8a8be6302d4a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40635-019-0268-8