| Literature DB >> 28916973 |
Irene T Schrijver1, Hans Kemperman2, Mark Roest3, Jozef Kesecioglu4, Dylan W de Lange4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) is a clinical syndrome following inflammation. Clinically, it is difficult to distinguish SIRS following an infection, i.e., sepsis, from non-infectious SIRS. Myeloperoxidase is a hemeprotein stored in the neutrophil azurophilic granules and is one of the main pillars of neutrophil attack. Therefore, we hypothesized that myeloperoxidase can differentiate between sepsis and non-infectious SIRS in patients with systemic inflammatory response syndrome in the intensive care unit (ICU).Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Critical care; Mortality; Myeloperoxidase; SIRS; Sepsis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28916973 PMCID: PMC5602808 DOI: 10.1186/s40635-017-0157-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med Exp ISSN: 2197-425X
Mortality risk and hazard ratios
|
| Deaths | Mortality | Hazard ratio | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MPO < 91, APACHE < 103 | 180 (64) | 32 | 18% | 1.0 | n/a |
| MPO > 91, APACHE < 103 | 46 (16) | 9 | 20% | 1.1 | 0.5–2.3 |
| MPO < 91, APACHE > 103 | 40 (14) | 21 | 53% | 3.8 | 2.2–6.6 |
| MPO > 91, APACHE > 103 | 14 (5) | 12 | 86% | 8.1 | 4.1–16 |
| Total | 280 (100) | 74 | 26% |
Descriptive characteristics, medians (IQR) or N (%)
| Characteristics | Overall |
|---|---|
| Number of patients | 313 |
| Gender, male | 193 (62%) |
| Age, years | 61 (24) |
| Diagnosis at admission | |
| Trauma | 23 (7.3%) |
| Infection (suspicion of) | 79 (25%) |
| Post-surgery | 53 (17%) |
| Other | 155 (50%) |
| Severity of illness (at admission) | |
| Mechanical ventilation | 202 (66%) |
| APACHE IV score | 75 (40) |
| SOFA score | 6 (6) |
| ICU stay, days | 9 (10) |
| Sepsis at admission to ICU | 123 (39%) |
| Mortality 30 days | 77 (25%) |
| Site of infection sepsis patientsa
| |
| Skin/wound | 12 (10%) |
| Pneumonia | 58 (47%) |
| Line sepsis | 11 (9%) |
| Abdominal | 12 (10%) |
| Urinary tract | 3 (2.4%) |
| Other/unknown | 41 (33%) |
| Proven infection in sepsis patients ( | 62 (50%) |
| CRP, mg/L | 216 (189) |
| Leukocytes max, × 109/L | 16 (10) |
IQR indicates interquartile range
a14% mixed infections
Fig. 1Myeloperoxidase (MPO) levels in different states of inflammation. Septic shock has higher MPO levels compared with sepsis, P = 0.04. Patients with sepsis (sepsis + septic shock) have higher MPO levels compared with patients without sepsis, P = 0.002
Fig. 2ROC curves of MPO, CRP, and leukocytes in relation to sepsis. MPO myeloperoxidase, CRP C-reactive protein. MPO and CRP are both related to sepsis with an AUC 0.603 (CI 0.539–0.668) and AUC 0.636 (CI 0.573–0.699). Leukocytes have no discriminative value
Fig. 3Kaplan Meier 30-day survival curve. MPO myeloperoxidase, APACHE Acute Physiology And Chronic Health Evaluation. Single asterisk indicates significant difference with upper lines (P > 0.001), and double asterisks indicate significant difference with third line (P = 0.028)