| Literature DB >> 28114931 |
Ramon Sager1,2, Alexander Kutz1,2, Beat Mueller1,2, Philipp Schuetz3,4.
Abstract
Several controlled clinical studies have evaluated the potential of the infection biomarker procalcitonin (PCT) to improve the diagnostic work-up of patients with bacterial infections and its influence on decisions regarding antibiotic therapy. Most research has focused on lower respiratory tract infections and critically ill sepsis patients. A clinical utility for PCT has also been found for patients with urinary tract infections, postoperative infections, meningitis, and patients with acute heart failure with possible superinfection (i.e., pneumonia). In these indications, PCT levels measured on hospital admission were found to substantially reduce the initiation of antibiotic treatment in low-risk situations (i.e., bronchitis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease exacerbation). For more severe infections (i.e., pneumonia, sepsis), antibiotic stewardship by monitoring of PCT kinetics resulted in shorter antibiotic treatment durations with early cessation of therapy. Importantly, these strategies appear to be safe without increasing the risk for mortality, recurrent infections, or treatment failures. PCT kinetics also proved to have prognostic value correlating with disease severity (i.e., pancreatitis, abdominal infection) and resolution of illness (i.e., sepsis). Although promising findings have been published in these different types of infections, there are a number of limitations regarding PCT, including suboptimal sensitivity and/or specificity, which makes a careful interpretation of PCT in the clinical context mandatory. This narrative review aims to update clinicians on the strengths and limitations of PCT for patient management, focusing on research conducted within the last 4 years.Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotic stewardship; Pneumonia; Procalcitonin; Respiratory tract infection; Sepsis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28114931 PMCID: PMC5259962 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-017-0795-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Overview of studies investigating the use of procalcitonin in different types and sites of infections
| Type of infection | New studies since 2010? | Study design | PCT cut-off (μg/L) | Benefit of PCT use? | Main conclusions | Selected references since 2012 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pulmonary | AECOPD | yes | RCT (N = 120), | <0.25 | ++ | PCT reduces initiation of antibiotic treatment in the ED without adverse outcomes | [ |
| Asthma | yes | RCT (N = 216) | <0.1–0.25 | ++ | PCT reduces initiation of antibiotic treatment in the ED without adverse outcomes | [ | |
| Bronchitis | yes (Registry) | RCT, real-life (Registry) | <0.1–0.25 | ++ | PCT reduces initiation of antibiotic treatment in the ED without adverse outcomes | [ | |
| Community-acquired pneumonia | yes | RCT, meta-analysis (N = 4467) | <0.1–0.25; 80–90% decrease | +++ | PCT shortens length of antibiotic therapy in the ED and hospital ward without adverse outcomes | [ | |
| Pulmonary fibrosis | yes | RCT (N = 78) | <0.25 | ++ | PCT reduces initiation of antibiotic treatment in the ED without adverse outcomes | [ | |
| Upper respiratory tract infections | no | RCT (N = 458, 702) | <0.1–0.25 | +++ | PCT reduces initiation of antibiotic treatment in primary care without adverse outcomes (non-inferiority) | [ | |
| Heart | Congestive heart failure | yes | Observational, RCT (secondary analysis, N = 110) | <0.21–0.25 | ++ | PCT helps in identification of bacterial superinfection in acute heart failure, may be helpful in guiding antibiotic treatment | [ |
| Endocarditis | no | Observational, meta-analysis | <0.5 | + | PCT is a predictor of poor outcome, diagnostic value similar to CRP | [ | |
| Abdominal | Abdominal infections with peritonitis | yes | Observational | <0.5; 80% decrease | ++ | PCT-guided therapy was associated with lower antibiotic exposure with no difference in mortality | [ |
| Appendicitis | yes | Observational, meta-analysis | NR | + | PCT is a marker of complicated appendicitis, low value for diagnosing appendicitis | [ | |
| Pancreatitis | yes | RCT (N = 71) | <0.5 | ++ | PCT reduces antibiotic exposure compared to prophylactic antibiotic treatment without adverse outcomes | [ | |
| Urinary tract infections | yes | RCT (N = 125) | <0.25 | ++ | PCT reduces antibiotic exposure without adverse effects | [ | |
| Blood | Blood stream infection | yes | Observational | <0.25–1.47 | ++ | PCT levels correlate with risk for positive blood cultures | [ |
| Neutropenia | yes | RCT (N = 62) | NR | – | PCT is not useful to manage antibiotic therapy, but PCT was a marker of bacteremia | [ | |
| Severe sepsis/shock | yes | RCT (N = 1575) | <0.5; 80% decrease | +++ | PCT reduces antibiotic exposure and 3 month mortality in the ICU | [ | |
| Postoperative | Postoperative abdominal infection | yes | Observational, meta-analysis | NR | + | Low PCT post-surgical ensure safe discharge, PCT is similar to CRP | [ |
| Postoperative infections | yes | RCTs, Observational | <0.5–2.0 | ++ | Low PCT suggests absence of perioperative infection and enables early discharge | ||
| Other | Arthritis | yes | Observational | <0.5 | + | PCT identifies infection in patients with rheumatoid arthritis | [ |
| Erysipelas | yes | Observational | <0.1 | + | PCT differentiates erysipelas from DVT | [ | |
| Meningitis | no | RCT, meta-analysis (N = 2058) | <0.5 | +++ | PCT reduces AB treatment during viral outbreak; serum PCT with CSF lactate reliably identifies bacterial meningitis | [ |
Abbreviations: AB antibiotic, AECOPD acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, CSF cerebral spinal fluid, CRP C-reactive protein, ED emergency department; ICU intensive care unit; NR not reported, PCT procalcitonin, RCT randomized controlled trial. The level of evidence in favor or against PCT for each infection was rated by two of the coauthors (PS, RSA) independently and disagreements were resolved by consensus. +: moderate evidence in favor of PCT; ++: good evidence in favor of PCT; +++: strong evidence in favor of PCT; –: no evidence in favor of PCT
Fig. 1Summary of evidence regarding procalcitonin (PCT) for diagnosis and antibiotic stewardship in organ-related infections. While for some infections, intervention studies have investigated benefit and harm of using PCT for diagnosis and antibiotic stewardship (left side), for other infections only results from diagnostic (observation) studies are available (right side). +: moderate evidence in favor of PCT; ++: good evidence in favor of PCT; +++: strong evidence in favor of PCT; – no evidence in favor of PCT
Fig. 2Procalcitonin (PCT) algorithm in patients with respiratory tract infections in the emergency department. The clinical algorithm for antibiotic stewardship in patients with respiratory tract infections in the emergency department encourages (>0.5 ng/ml or >0.25 ng/ml) or discourages (<0.1 ng/ml or <0.25 ng/ml) initiation or continuation of antibiotic therapy more or less based on specific PCT cut-off ranges. Abbreviations: AB antibiotic, LRTI lower respiratory tract infection, ICU intensive care unit, PSI pneumonia severity score
Fig. 3Procalcitonin (PCT) algorithm in patients with sepsis in the intensive care unit (ICU). In critically ill patients in the ICU, cut-offs are higher and initial empiric antibiotic therapy should be encouraged in all patients with suspicion of sepsis. PCT cut-offs are helpful in the subsequent days after admission to shorten the course of antibiotic therapy in patients with clinical improvement