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Prognostic value of inflammatory markers (notably cytokines and procalcitonin), nutritional assessment, and organ function in patients with sepsis

Marta Suárez-Santamaría1, Francisco Santolaria2, Alina Pérez-Ramírez2, María-Remedios Alemán-Valls2, Antonio Martínez-Riera2, Emilio González-Reimers2, María-José de la Vega1, Antonio Milena1

1 Biochemistry laboratory
2 Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital of the Canary Islands, Tenerife, Spain

* Corresponding Author: F. Santolaria, email

European Cytokine Network 2010, 21(1), 19-26. https://doi.org/10.1684/ecn.2009.0185

Abstract

Objective. Procalcitonin is useful for the diagnosis of sepsis, but its prognostic value regarding mortality is unclear. Our objective was to determine the prognostic value of procalcitonin determined at the onset of sepsis, and to compare it with other markers of inflammatory response, malnutrition and organ dys-function data. Methods. We studied 253 hospitalized patients (146 men, 107 women) with a median age of 65 years. Sepsis was defined as infection, and at least two SIRS criteria. We assessed co-morbidities, nutritional status, bacteremia, procalcitonin and other inflammatory markers (PCR, TNF-α, IL6, TREM-1, IL-10, IL-1ra, CD14 and LBP), and organ function using the SOFA score. Mortality was assessed at 28 days after onset of sepsis. Results. At day 28, 49 (19%) patients had died. Inflammatory markers showed only moderate predictive value for mortality, with IL-10 and IL-6 being the best predictors. Mortality was mainly related to organ dysfunction indicators (SOFA and Glasgow scores), serum lactate, ferritin and LDH levels, and to nutritional data such as subjective assessment, handgrip strength and serum transferrin levels. The most frequent location of sepsis was the lung, with 140 cases (55%), which showed more comorbidity, worse nutritional status, less frequent bacteremia and lower inflammatory response. When the analysis was limited to patients with non-pulmonary sepsis, organ dysfunction, nutritional status and inflammatory markers showed the best prognostic value. Of the inflammatory markers, procalcitonin showed only moderate predictive value; however it showed the highest correlation with bacteremia and the ability to discriminate non-complicated sepsis from severe forms. Conclusion. Procalcitonin only showed moderate predictive value for sepsis-related mortality, being sur-passed by organ dysfunction, nutritional status, IL-10 and IL-6. However, it proved useful to discriminate between non-complicated and severe forms of sepsis.

Keywords

procalcitonin, IL-6, IL-10, mortality, sepsis

Cite This Article

APA Style
Suárez-Santamaría, M., Santolaria, F., Pérez-Ramírez, A., Alemán-Valls, M., Martínez-Riera, A. et al. (2010). Prognostic value of inflammatory markers (notably cytokines and procalcitonin), nutritional assessment, and organ function in patients with sepsis. European Cytokine Network, 21(1), 19–26. https://doi.org/10.1684/ecn.2009.0185
Vancouver Style
Suárez-Santamaría M, Santolaria F, Pérez-Ramírez A, Alemán-Valls M, Martínez-Riera A, González-Reimers E, et al. Prognostic value of inflammatory markers (notably cytokines and procalcitonin), nutritional assessment, and organ function in patients with sepsis. Eur Cytokine Network. 2010;21(1):19–26. https://doi.org/10.1684/ecn.2009.0185
IEEE Style
M. Suárez-Santamaría et al., “Prognostic value of inflammatory markers (notably cytokines and procalcitonin), nutritional assessment, and organ function in patients with sepsis,” Eur. Cytokine Network, vol. 21, no. 1, pp. 19–26, 2010. https://doi.org/10.1684/ecn.2009.0185



cc Copyright © 2010 The Author(s). Published by Tech Science Press.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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