| Literature DB >> 33080689 |
Ilan Goldberg1, Dana Shalmon1, Ronen Shteinvil2, Shlomo Berliner2, Yael Paran3, David Zeltser2, Itzhak Shapira2, Shani Shenhar-Tsarfaty2, Ahuva Meilik4, Asaf Wasserman2, Ilana Goldiner5, Tomer Ziv-Baran6, Eli Sprecher1, Tal Levinson2,3, Ori Rogowski2.
Abstract
A first C-reactive protein (CRP) test, as often performed by clinicians during the presentation of patients with an acute bacterial infection, might be misleading. The aim of our study was to explore the dynamic between a second CRP test taken within 12 hours from admission CRP test in a cohort of patients diagnosed with acute bacterial infection in comparison to CRP in a control group of apparently healthy individuals.This was a historical cohort study comprised of all patients admitted to the Sourasky Tel-Aviv Medical Center, Israel, between July 2007 and March 2016. The study cohort included adult patients who were diagnosed as having an infection, assumed to be of bacterial etiology (cellulitis and erysipelas, pneumonia, cholecystitis, pyelonephritis, or septicemia), who had a CRP test during the first 6 hours of hospital admission (baseline CRP), and a successive CRP test up to 12 hours from the first one (recurrent CRP). The control group was of healthy subjects who attended our medical center for a routine annual check-up.The study included 950 patients. Baseline CRP ranged from 0.04 to 454 mg/L. The median CRP velocity was 0.53 mg/L/h. Patients were grouped by baseline CRP into 4 groups (CRP < 10, 10-74.9, 75-199.9, ≥200). There was an increase in median CRP velocity between the first (0.48 mg/L/h) and the second (0.93 mg/L/h) groups, which then was decreased in the next 2 groups (0.46 and -2.58 mg/L/h, respectively). In 45 of 103 (44%) patients of the group of baseline CRP concentration less than 10 mg/dL with bacterial diagnosis, there was a complete overlap with CRP values of apparently healthy individuals during their routine annual checkup.A first single low CRP result cannot exclude the presence of a significant bacterial infection. Patients with acute bacterial infection might present with a relatively low CRP value that at times correspond to normal limit CRP concentrations. A second test, obtained within 12 hours of admission, might serve as an important tool to identify patient with an evolving inflammatory burst commonly seen during acute bacterial infection.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33080689 PMCID: PMC7571963 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000022551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.817
Patients’ characteristics.
Figure 1Correlation between baseline C-reactive protein and recurrent C-reactive protein. Red cycles express patients with recurrent C-Reactive Protein higher than baseline and green cycles represent patients with recurrent C-reactive protein lower than baseline. (A) All cohort, (B) Cellulitis, (C) Pneumonia, (D) Septicemia. CRP = C-reactive protein.
Figure 2The association between baseline C-reactive protein and C-reactive protein difference. CRP = C-reactive protein.
Baseline C-reactive protein, recurrent C-reactive protein, C-reactive protein difference, C-reactive protein velocity, and C-reactive protein ratio in all cohorts and in subgroups of patients according to their baseline C-Reactive Protein as revealed by CHAID analysis (A) and (B) and according to their baseline C-Reactive Protein ranking (x100 lowest, 100 highest C-reactive protein values, C).
Figure 3Box and whisker plot of C-reactive protein velocity by baseline C-reactive protein. CRP = C-reactive protein.
Figure 4Box and whisker plot of C-reactive protein ratio by baseline C-Reactive Protein. (A) All cohort, (B) Cellulitis, (C) Pneumonia, (D) Septicemia. CRP = C-reactive protein.
Comparison of patients that ranked as having the 100 lowest baseline C-reactive protein values to those with 100 highest baseline C-reactive protein values∗.
Figure 5C-Reactive protein distributions of patients and controls with values below 10 mg/L. CRP = C-reactive protein.
Characteristics of patients with the most 3 common single infections∗.
Recurrent C-reactive protein, C-reactive protein difference, C-reactive protein velocity, and C-reactive protein ratio in patients with the most 3 common single infection and in subgroups of patients in each infection diagnosis according to their baseline C-reactive protein as revealed by CHAID analysis.