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The early identification of disease progression in patients with suspected infection presenting to the emergency department: a multi-centre derivation and validation study

Authors :
Kordo Saeed
Darius Cameron Wilson
Frank Bloos
Philipp Schuetz
Yuri van der Does
Olle Melander
Pierre Hausfater
Jacopo M. Legramante
Yann-Erick Claessens
Deveendra Amin
Mari Rosenqvist
Graham White
Beat Mueller
Maarten Limper
Carlota Clemente Callejo
Antonella Brandi
Marc-Alexis Macchi
Nicholas Cortes
Alexander Kutz
Peter Patka
María Cecilia Yañez
Sergio Bernardini
Nathalie Beau
Matthew Dryden
Eric C. M. van Gorp
Marilena Minieri
Louisa Chan
Pleunie P. M. Rood
Juan Gonzalez del Castillo
Source :
Critical Care, Vol 23, Iss 1, Pp 1-15 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
BMC, 2019.

Abstract

Abstract Background There is a lack of validated tools to assess potential disease progression and hospitalisation decisions in patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with a suspected infection. This study aimed to identify suitable blood biomarkers (MR-proADM, PCT, lactate and CRP) or clinical scores (SIRS, SOFA, qSOFA, NEWS and CRB-65) to fulfil this unmet clinical need. Methods An observational derivation patient cohort validated by an independent secondary analysis across nine EDs. Logistic and Cox regression, area under the receiver operating characteristic (AUROC) and Kaplan-Meier curves were used to assess performance. Disease progression was identified using a composite endpoint of 28-day mortality, ICU admission and hospitalisation > 10 days. Results One thousand one hundred seventy-five derivation and 896 validation patients were analysed with respective 28-day mortality rates of 7.1% and 5.0%, and hospitalisation rates of 77.9% and 76.2%. MR-proADM showed greatest accuracy in predicting 28-day mortality and hospitalisation requirement across both cohorts. Patient subgroups with high MR-proADM concentrations (≥ 1.54 nmol/L) and low biomarker (PCT

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13648535
Volume :
23
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Critical Care
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.9199435d707f41d1a5a3ce217b21ada6
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-019-2329-5