1. Urinary cystatin-C and urinary NGAL associated with sepsis predicts longer hospital stay in premature newborns.
- Author
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Silva Barbosa JD, Meneses GC, Castelo LR, da Silva Júnior GB, Costa Martins AM, Francesco Daher E, Sampaio TL, Oliveira Gomes A, Carvalho Dantas SM, Silva Rebouças AD, de Lima PR, Lopes NC, da Silva ME, Rodrigues da Costa MD, Reis Jereissati AA, Ramos VQ, Gonçalves Machado RP, and Gonçalves Lemes RP
- Subjects
- Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Female, Acute-Phase Proteins urine, Proto-Oncogene Proteins urine, Proto-Oncogene Proteins blood, Cystatin C blood, Cystatin C urine, Lipocalin-2 urine, Lipocalin-2 blood, Biomarkers urine, Biomarkers blood, Sepsis urine, Sepsis diagnosis, Sepsis blood, Length of Stay, Infant, Premature urine
- Abstract
Aim: To evaluate the urinary biomarkers related to sepsis in preterm newborns (NBs) and to investigate the predictive capacity of these biomarkers for a longer hospital stay. Methods: Serum and urine were collected from 27 healthy NBs, 24 NBs with neonatal infection without sepsis and 11 NBs with sepsis for the measurement of sindecan-1, lipocalin associated with urinary neutrophil gelatinase (uNGAL), urinary cystatin-C (uCysC) and urinary kidney injury molecule-1. Results: Levels of uNGAL and urinary cystatin-C were elevated in NBs with sepsis and neonatal infection, and uNGAL was significant predictor of hospital stay longer than 30 days (odds ratio: 1.052; 95% CI: 1.012-1.093; p = 0.01). Conclusion: uNGAL was associated with sepsis in preterm NBs and was useful to predict extended hospital stay.
- Published
- 2024
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