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Severe respiratory viral infection induces procalcitonin in the absence of bacterial pneumonia

Authors :
Marcos I. Restrepo
Lokesh Sharma
Xiting Yan
Grant Young
Patricia Valda Toro
Rupak Datta
Yannick Stahl
Nicholas Ristic
Santos Bermejo
Avi J. Cohen
Samir Gautam
Charles S. Dela Cruz
Source :
Thorax. 75:974-981
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
BMJ, 2020.

Abstract

IntroductionProcalcitonin expression is thought to be stimulated by bacteria and suppressed by viruses via interferon signalling. Consequently, during respiratory viral illness, clinicians often interpret elevated procalcitonin as evidence of bacterial coinfection, prompting antibiotic administration. We sought to evaluate the validity of this practice and the underlying assumption that viral infection inhibits procalcitonin synthesis.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective cohort study of patients hospitalised with pure viral infection (n=2075) versus bacterial coinfection (n=179). The ability of procalcitonin to distinguish these groups was assessed. In addition, procalcitonin and interferon gene expression were evaluated in murine and cellular models of influenza infection.ResultsPatients with bacterial coinfection had higher procalcitonin than those with pure viral infection, but also more severe disease and higher mortality (pDiscussionThese studies reveal that procalcitonin rises during pure viral infection in proportion to disease severity and is not suppressed by interferon signalling, in contrast to prior models of procalcitonin regulation. Applied clinically, our data suggest that procalcitonin represents a better indicator of disease severity than bacterial coinfection during viral respiratory infection.

Details

ISSN :
14683296 and 00406376
Volume :
75
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Thorax
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0d47e06640884a75b1d5c95d4ea21954
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/thoraxjnl-2020-214896