Episode 110. The use of Methylene Blue for Refractory Hypotension with Rosa Malloy-Post, MD


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Nov 14 2023 24 mins   18




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Guest For the podcast






Rosa Malloy-Post 



Hometown: Brooklyn, NY



College: Fort Lewis College Durango, CO



Medical school: University of Colorado



What you love about living in/moving to Charlotte: The food and the trees. Coming from Denver it’s nice to have some greenery.  The variety and concentration of good food is impressive, I haven’t had a bad meal yet. 



What you see yourself doing in 10 years: Who knows? I’m opened to exploring fellowship opportunities in toxicology or palliative care. I enjoy teaching so I see an academic career in my future.  I’ll most likely be somewhere in the mountain west. 







Methylene blue



History and Background




  • First synthesized in 1876 by Heinrich Caro at BASF as a blue textile dye, originally named “methyl blue”


  • In 1891, Paul Ehrlich discovered it could stain certain microorganisms and used it to differentiate bacterial species


  • Used as antiseptic/antibacterial in late 1800s, including treating tropical diseases like malaria


  • Approved by FDA in 1959 as a treatment for methemoglobinemia, a condition where hemoglobin is oxidized to the ferric (Fe3+) form, making it unable to carry oxygen. Doses of 1-2 mg/kg IV can reduce methoglobin levels by acting as an electron donor.


  • Studied as potential treatment for hypotension starting in 1980s. Case reports showed benefit in refractory septic shock. Proposed as nitric oxide scavenger and vasopressor.


  • Multiple human studies in 1990s looked at methylene blue for sepsis. Showed transient improvements in blood pressure but no mortality benefit.



CLASS




  • heterocyclic aromatic molecule



MECHANISM OF ACTION




  • two opposite actions on Hb



(1) low concentrations: methylene blue -> NADPH-dependent reduction to leucomethylene blue (due to action of methaemoglobin reductase) -> reduces methaemoglobin -> Hb



(2) high concentrations: methylene blue -> converts ferrous iron of reduced Hb to ferric ion -> forms methaemoglobin




  • inhibits guanylate cyclase (which is stimulated by NO and other mediators), thus decreasing C-GMP and vascular smooth muscle relaxation


  • MAO inhibition

    Dose


  • Methaemoglobinaemia

    • 1-2mg/kg IV over 5 minutes followed by saline flush; repeat at 30-60 min if MetHb levels not falling


    • repeat dose every 6-8h when MetHb continues for days, e.g. dapsone toxicity




  • Vasoplegia

    • 1.5-2 mg/kg IV over 30-60min



    • INDICATIONS

      • methaemoglobinemia

        • — symptomatic


        • — asymptomatic with >20% MetHb, or >10% if risk factors such as anaemia or ischemic heart disease




      • vasoplegic shock post cardiopulmonary bypass


      • other possible roles in critical illness: hepatopulmonary syndrome, septic shock


      • other uses have included use as an antimalarial agent, anti-cancer treatment, treatment of ifosfamide neurotoxicity, as a dye/stain (e.g. test for aspiration), priapism






  • CONTRA-INDICATIONS

    • G6PD deficiency (lack of NADPH prevents methylene blue from working and may lead to haemolysis)


    • renal impairment


    • methaemoglobin reductase deficiency


    • nitrite-induced methaemoglobinaemia due to cyanide poisoning


    • hypersensitivity








  • ADVERSE EVENTS

    • inability to monitor oxygen saturation by SpO2 or continuous central venous saturation monitoring


    • non-specific symptoms: dizziness, headache, confusion, chest pain, shortness of breath, nausea and vomitng


    • local pain and irritation


    • blue staining of mucous membrane may mimic cyanosis


    • paradoxical methaemoglobinaemia due to direct oxidative effect on Hb (typically at very high doses > 7 mg/kg)


    • acute haemolytic anemia in G6PD deficiency (typically doses >15mg/kg)


    • anaphylaxis


    • MAO inhibiton may contribute to serotonin toxicity or hypertensive crisis








  • Key Clinical Studies

    • Levin et al. 2004 RCT in post-CABG vasoplegic shock

      • 28 patients, MB 2 mg/kg vs placebo


      • Marked improvement in hemodynamics


      • Mortality benefit – 0% vs 21% in placebo group (p=0.01)




    • Kirov et al. 2001 RCT in established septic shock

      • 20 patients, MB vs placebo


      • Increased MAP, decreased vasopressor needs




    • Porizka et al. 2020 retrospective study

      • Looked at MAP increase ≥10% to define “responders”


      • Improved survival in responders




    • Franz et al. 2021 case series

      • 11 patients with post-cardiotomy shock


      • 82% rate of MB response based on 20% MAP increase


      • Survival benefit in responders (92% vs 50%)







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