| Literature DB >> 31796098 |
Aziza N AlRawahi1, Fatma A AlHinai2, Christopher J Doig3, Chad G Ball2,4, Elijah Dixon2, Zhengwen Xiao4, Andrew W Kirkpatrick2,3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Major trauma is associated with high incidence of septic complications and multiple organ dysfunction (MOD), which markedly influence the outcome of injured patients. Early identification of patients at risk of developing posttraumatic complications is crucial to provide early treatment and improve outcomes. We sought to evaluate the prognostic value of serum procalcitonin (PCT) levels after trauma as related to severity of injury, sepsis, organ dysfunction, and mortality.Entities:
Keywords: Critical care; Injuries; Intensive care unit; Procalcitonin; Prognosis; Trauma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31796098 PMCID: PMC6892215 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-019-2669-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Flow diagram of selected studies for review
Details of study characteristics of included studies
| Study | Study design | Study setting | No. of patients | Mortality % | Peak PCT level | PCT level predicting outcomes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sepsis | MODS | Death | ||||||
| Ren et al. [ | Prospective case-control | Trauma surgical department | 56 | – | Days 1 and 2 | Yes | – | – |
| Wojtaszek et al. [ | Prospective cohort | – | 45 | Data not shown | Day 1 | No | – | Yes |
| Rajkumari et al. [ | Prospective case-control | SICU | 275 | 10 | – | Yes | No | – |
| Sakran et al. [ | Prospective cohort | Trauma ICU | 102 | 13 | Days 1 and 2 | Yes | – | Yes |
| Haasper et al. [ | Prospective cohort | ICU | 94 | 12 | Days 2 and 3 | No | Yes | – |
| Keel et al. [ | Prospective cohort | Trauma center | 83 | 12 | Day 1 | Yes | – | – |
| Castelli et al. [ | Prospective cohort | ICU | 94 | 5 | Day 1 | Yes | Yes | – |
| Billeter et al. [ | Retrospective cohort | SICU | 1032 | 10 | Day 1 | Yes | – | – |
| Maier et al. [ | Prospective cohort | – | 74 | – | Day 1 | – | – | – |
| Balci et al. [ | Prospective cohort | SICU | 113 | 44 | Days 1 and 7 | Yes | – | Yes |
| Castelli et al. [ | Prospective cohort | ICU | 49 | – | Day 1 | Yes | Yes | – |
| Ertugrul et al. [ | Prospective case-control | SICU | 41 | – | – | No | – | – |
| Meisner et al. [ | Prospective cohort | ICU | 90 | 17 | Day 1 | Yes | No | Yes |
| Egger et al. [ | Prospective cohort | ICU | 26 | – | – | Yes | – | – |
| Hensler et al. [ | Prospective case-control | Trauma center | 137 | 11 | Days 1 + 2 combined | No | Yes | No |
| Andermahr et al. [ | Prospective case-control | ICU | 133 | 21 | Day 1 | No | – | – |
| Oberholzer et al. [ | Prospective case-control | Trauma center | 1276 | 7 | Day 1 | Yes | Yes | – |
| Wanner et al. [ | Retrospective case-control | ICU | 405 | 23 | Days 1 and 3 | Yes | Yes | No |
| Mimoz et al. [ | Prospective cohort | SICU | 21 | 14 | Day 1 | No | Yes | – |
Abbreviations: ICU intensive care unit, SICU surgical intensive care unit, PCT procalcitonin, MODS multiple organ dysfunction syndrome
Fig. 2Studies evaluated the role of procalcitonin levels in predicting clinical outcomes following trauma
Fig. 3Assessment of risk of bias using QUIPS tool
Prognostic values of other biomarkers studied simultaneously with serum PCT levels
| Study | Other biomarkers | Comments on other biomarkers |
|---|---|---|
| Ren et al. [ | HSP70, WBC | - HSP70 and WBC levels were elevated at 1–6 h post injury while PCT increased 24 h post - Magnitude of HSP70 increased was related to the severity of injury - Increased HSP70 24 h post injury suggested infection |
| Rajkumari et al. [ | CRP | - No difference in CRP levels between patients with and without sepsis - PCT and CRP did not correlate with SOFA score |
| Haasper et al. [ | IL-6 | - IL-6 levels peaked on day 0, while PCT peaked levels peaked on day 1 - Significant difference in IL-6 and PCT levels between patients with and without MODS - No difference in IL-6 and PCT levels between patients with and without sepsis |
| Keel et al. [ | PSP, CRP, IL-6 | - Significant difference in PSP levels between patients with and without sepsis during hospital stay - Slow induction of CRP with peak levels reaching day 3. Significant difference in CRP levels between patients with and without sepsis on day 7 after trauma - Peak IL-6 levels of day 0 after trauma. Significantly higher IL-6 levels in septic patients after day 5 compared to patients with no infection - Peak PCT on day 1. Significant PCT levels between patients with sepsis and without on days 1, 3, 5, 7, and 14 - No difference in CRP, PCT, and IL-6 levels between patients with sepsis and local infection |
| Castelli et al. [ | CRP | - No difference in CRP levels between patients with and without sepsis - CRP did not correlate with SOFA score |
| Billeter et al. [ | CRP, IL-6, lactate | -IL-6 peaked on day 1 after trauma - Significant difference in IL-6 levels between patients with or without sepsis on days 3 and 5. No difference after day 5 - Slow induction of CRP with peak levels reaching between days 3 and 7 - Significant difference in CRP levels between patients with or without sepsis on days 5, 7, and 14 - Insufficient 24-h lactate clearance was associated with high rate of mortality and sepsis |
| Balci et al. [ | CRP | - CRP levels were higher only in cases of severe sepsis or septic shock, but not in cases of sepsis alone - Significant difference in CRP level between survivors and non-survivors on days 1 and 7 |
| Castelli et al. [ | CRP | - Slow induction of CRP after trauma - No correlation between CRP levels and sepsis - CRP levels correlated with SOFA score |
| Ertugrul et al. [ | CRP | - No difference in CRP levels between infected and non-infected groups |
| Meisner et al. [ | CRP | - CRP levels peaked on day 3 (slow induction) - No correlation between CRP levels and posttraumatic complications including sepsis, MODS, and mortality |
| Egger et al. [ | PMN migration, CRP, IL-6, IL-8, NT, lactate, cortisol, Elastase, MDA | - PMN migration was a highly sensitive predictive marker for infection - No difference in the other biomarker levels between infected and non-infected groups |
| Hensler et al. [ | Neopetrin (NT) | - NT level decreased on day 0 after trauma, followed by an increase on days 1 and 2 - Both PCT and NT were unable to differentiate between patients who developed sepsis or not - No difference between PCT or NT levels of survivors and non-survivors - No difference in NT levels between patients with and without MOF |
| Oberholzer et al. [ | IL-6 | Both PCT and IL-6 levels peaked on day 1 after trauma Both PCT and IL-6 levels were significantly higher in septic patients compared with patients without sepsis Both PCT and IL-6 levels were significantly higher in patients who developed MODS compared with patients without MODS |
| Mimoz et al. [ | CRP | - PCT levels peaked on day 1 while CRP levels peaked on day 2 after trauma - Both peak PCT and CRP levels were higher in patients who subsequently developed MODS |
Abbreviations: HAI hospital-acquired infection, CRP C-reactive protein, IL interleukin, PCT procalcitonin, NT neopetrin, PMN polymorphonuclear leucocyte, PSP pancreatic stone protein, SOFA sequential organ failure assessment, MODS multiple organ dysfunction syndrome, MDA malondialdehyde