| Literature DB >> 31016020 |
Yutaka Kondo1, Yutaka Umemura2, Kei Hayashida3, Yoshitaka Hara4, Morio Aihara5, Kazuma Yamakawa6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Early and accurate diagnosis of sepsis is challenging. Although procalcitonin and presepsin have been identified as potential biomarkers to differentiate between sepsis and other non-infectious causes of systemic inflammation, the diagnostic accuracy of these biomarkers remains controversial. Herein, we performed a comprehensive meta-analysis to assess the overall diagnostic value of procalcitonin and presepsin for the diagnosis of sepsis.Entities:
Keywords: Diagnostic test accuracy; Meta-analysis; Presepsin; Procalcitonin; Sepsis; Systematic review
Year: 2019 PMID: 31016020 PMCID: PMC6466719 DOI: 10.1186/s40560-019-0374-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intensive Care ISSN: 2052-0492
Fig. 1Flow chart of the identification and selection of studies for inclusion
Characteristics of the included studies
| Author, year | Country | Number of participants | Mean/median age | Study design | Sepsis definition | Cutoff value | Prevalence | Sensitivity | Specificity | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT (ng/ml) | P-SEP (pg/ml) | PCT | P-SEP | PCT | P-SEP | |||||||
| Ali, 2016 [ | Egypt | 51 | 49.8 | Prospective | Sepsis-3 | 0.85 | 907 | 0.647 | 60.6% | 69.7% | 88.9% | 83.3% |
| Balci, 2003 [ | Turkey | 89 | 58 | Prospective | Sepsis-1 | 2.415 | – | 0.461 | 85.4% | – | 91.7% | – |
| Bauer, 2016 [ | USA | 219 | 59 | Prospective | Sepsis-1 | 0.74 | – | 0.551 | 73.1% | – | 74.2% | – |
| Behnes, 2014 [ | Germany | 116 |
| Prospective | Sepsis-2 | – | 530 | 0.705 | – | 91.0% | – | 53.6% |
| ÇakirMadenci, 2014 [ | Turkey | 37 | 40 | Prospective | ABA 2007a) | 0.759 | 542 | 0.393 | 75.4% | 77.5% | 78.7% | 76.5% |
| Endo 2012 [ | Japan | 185 | 66 | Prospective | Sepsis-2 | 0.5 | 600 | 0.622 | 86.1% | 87.8% | 78.6% | 81.4% |
| Enguix-Armada 2016 [ | Spain | 388 | 63 | Prospective | Sepsis-2 | 0.28 | 101.6 | 0.634 | 92.3% | 81.7% | 96.5% | 96.5% |
| Gibot 2004 [ | France | 76 | 60 | Prospective | Sepsis-1 | 0.6 | – | 0.618 | 83.0% | – | 69.0% | – |
| Godnic 2015 [ | Slovenia | 47 | N.A. | Retrospective | Sepsis-2 | 3.12 | 413 | 0.851 | 57.5% | 85.0% | 71.4% | 57.1% |
| Klouche 2016 [ | France | 144 | 58 | Prospective | Sepsis-1 | 0.5 | 466 | 0.694 | 80.0% | 90.0% | 59.1% | 54.5% |
| Leli 2016 [ | Italy | 92 | 73 | Prospective | Sepsis-1 | 4.4 | 843.5 | 0.281 | 84.0% | 88.0% | 84.4% | 71.9% |
| Miglietta 2015 [ | Italy | 145 | 64.4 | Retrospective | Sepsis-1 | 0.88 | – | 0.625 | 85.7% | – | 83.3% | – |
| Romualdo 2014 | Spain | 226 | 67 | Prospective | Original | 0.45 | 729 | 0.164 | 75.7% | 81.1% | 64.0% | 63.0% |
| Selberg 2000 [ | Germany | 33 | 47.9 | Prospective | Sepsis-1 | 3.3 | – | 0.667 | 86.4% | – | 54.5% | – |
| Takahashi 2016 [ | Japan | 103 | 68 | Prospective | Sepsis-1 | 0.85 | 658 | 0.85 | 78.8% | 72.9% | 73.3% | 60.0% |
| Ugarte 1999 [ | Belgium | 190 | 62 | Prospective | Sepsis-1 | 0.6 | – | 0.584 | 67.6% | – | 60.8% | – |
| vanderGeest 2016 [ | Netherlands | 301 | 57 | Prospective | Original | 1.41 | – | 0.505 | 65.1% | – | 66.4% | – |
| Wong 2013 [ | France | 270 | 61 | Prospective | Not described | 0.5 | – | 0.537 | 88.3% | – | 64.0% | – |
| Yang 2016 [ | China | 300 | 64 | Prospective | Sepsis-1 | 0.4475 | – | 0.357 | 83.2% | – | 53.9% | – |
PCT procalcitonin, P-SEP presepsin
a)American Burn Association Consensus Criteria
Fig. 2Risk of bias and applicability concerns summary (a) and graph (b), review authors’ judgements about each domain, for each included study
Fig. 3Forest plots of PCT and P-SEP for the diagnosis of infection. The plot shows study-specific estimates of sensitivity and specificity with 95% confidence interval (CI). The studies were ordered according to the study names. PCT, procalcitonin; P-SEP, presepsin
Fig. 4Summary ROC curves of PCT (the solid line) and P-SEP (the dashed line) for the detection of infection. Each pair of points represents the pair of sensitivity and specificity for each evaluation. PCT, procalcitonin; P-SEP, presepsin. The overall diagnostic accuracy of PCT and P-SEP for infection was moderate and comparable
Fig. 5Univariate meta-regression analysis by several possible causes of heterogeneities. PCT, procalcitonin; P-SEP, presepsin. To correct for multiple comparisons with 10 relevant covariates, we considered a p value of < 0.05 as statistical significance. The sensitivity of heterogeneity among included studies might be attributable to several factors, such as risk of bias, publication years, and prevalence of infection
Fig. 6Deeks’ funnel plot to estimate the presence of publication bias. PCT, procalcitonin; P-SEP, presepsin; ESS, effective sample size. We detected no evidence of publication bias (PCT: p = 0.67; P-SEP: p = 0.35)
GRADE evidence profile to determine the accuracy of PCT and P-SEP when used to diagnose bacterial infection in adult critically ill patients
The GRADE approach results in an assessment of the quality of a body of evidence in one of four grades: high, moderate, low, or very low. For each outcome, the quality of evidence started at high, were downgraded by one level when there was a serious issue identified, and were downgraded by two levels when there was a very serious issue identified in each factor to judge the quality of evidence
PCT procalcitonin, P-SEP presepsin, QoE quality of evidence
1)We downgraded all outcomes for risk of bias because all of the included studies presented an unclear or high risk of index test interpretation bias
2)We downgraded all outcomes for inconsistency because there were substantial heterogeneities among pooled results of sensitivity and specificity
3)We ranked the importance of all the four outcomes as critical