| Literature DB >> 29682292 |
Robert Goggs1, Matthew Milloway1, Roberta Troia2, Massimo Giunti2.
Abstract
Sepsis, the life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection, is difficult to identify and to prognosticate for. In people with sepsis, procalcitonin (PCT) measurement aids diagnosis, enables therapeutic monitoring and improves prognostic accuracy. This study used a commercial canine PCT assay to measure plasma PCT concentrations in dogs with gastric dilatation volvulus (GDV) syndrome and in dogs with sepsis. It was hypothesised that dogs with GDV syndrome and with sepsis have greater plasma PCT concentrations than healthy dogs and that dogs with sepsis have greater PCT concentrations than dogs with GDV syndrome. Before analysing canine plasma samples, the ability of the assay to identify canine PCT, in addition to assay imprecision and the lower limit of detection were established. The assay had low imprecision with coefficients of variation ≤4.5 per cent. The lower limit of detection was 3.4 pg/ml. Plasma PCT concentrations were measured in 20 dogs with sepsis, in 32 dogs with GDV syndrome and in 52 healthy dogs. Median (IQR) PCT concentration in dogs with sepsis 78.7 pg/ml (39.1-164.7) was significantly greater than in healthy dogs 49.8 pg/ml (36.2-63.7) (P=0.019), but there were no significant differences between PCT concentrations in dogs with GDV syndrome and controls (P=0.072) or between dogs with sepsis and GDV syndrome (P=1.000). Dogs with sepsis have significantly increased plasma PCT concentrations compared with healthy dogs, although considerable overlap between these populations was identified. Future investigations should confirm this finding in other populations and evaluate the diagnostic and prognostic value of PCT in dogs with sepsis.Entities:
Keywords: GDV; biomarker; dogs; procalcitonin; sepsis; systemic inflammatory response syndrome
Year: 2018 PMID: 29682292 PMCID: PMC5905832 DOI: 10.1136/vetreco-2017-000255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Rec Open ISSN: 2052-6113
Summary data from tandem mass spectrometry identifications
| Sample | Accession | Description | Score | Coverage | Unique peptides | PSMs |
| Recombinant | P41547 | Calcitonin | 4618.25 | 98.26 | 25 | 1520 |
| PCT ELISA standard | P41547 | Calcitonin | 4.00 | 17.39 | 1 | 1 |
CALCA, Calcitonin-related Polypeptide Alpha; PCT, procalcitonin; PSMs, peptide spectrum matches.
FIGURE 1:Assay repeatability and spike/recovery were evaluated by repeated analysis (all n=20) of samples spiked to known final concentrations of procalcitonin. The diluent buffer supplied by the manufacturer was spiked to three concentrations of procalcitonin (PCT) (50, 200, 400 pg/ml) using the protein standard supplied in the kit. Repeated measurement (n=20) of the diluent buffer was used to establish the lower limit of the blank. All blank PCT concentrations were 0. Bars represent mean, error bars represent sd.
FIGURE 2:Box and whisker plot comparison of plasma procalcitonin (PCT) concentrations from 40 healthy control dogs, 20 dogs with gastric dilatation volvulus (GDV) syndrome and 20 dogs with sepsis. The central line represents the median, the boxes represent the IQR and the whiskers represent the minimum and maximum values. Dogs with sepsis had significantly greater plasma concentrations of PCT compared with healthy controls (P=0.019) by Kruskal-Wallis with Dunn’s post hoc multiple comparisons test, indicated by an asterisk (*). Horizontal dotted lines represent the reference intervals 9.4–93.3 pg/ml calculated by the robust method, wherein the CIs were estimated by bootstrapping according to the percentile interval method (Efron and Tibshirani), using 10 000 iterations and a random number seed of 928.