on behalf of the CAPNETZ Study Group ABSTRACT: The aim of the present study was to investigate the prognostic value, in patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), of procalcitonin (PCT) compared with the established inflammatory markers C-reactive protein (CRP) and leukocyte (WBC) count alone or in combination with the CRB-65 (confusion, respiratory rate o30 breaths?min -1 , low blood pressure (systolic value ,90 mmHg or diastolic value f60 mmHg) and age o65 yrs) score. In total, 1,671 patients with proven CAP were enrolled in the study. PCT, CRP, WBC and CRB-65 score were all determined on admission and patients were followed-up for 28 days for survival.In contrast to CRP and WBC, PCT levels markedly increased with the severity of CAP, as measured by the CRB-65 score. In 70 patients who died during follow-up, PCT levels on admission were significantly higher compared with levels in survivors. In receiver operating characteristic analysis for survival, the area under the curve (95% confidence interval) for PCT and CRB-65 was comparable (0.80 (0.75-0.84) versus 0.79 (0.74-0.84)), but each significantly higher compared with CRP (0.62 (0.54-0.68)) and WBC (0.61 (0.54-0.68)). PCT identified low-risk patients across CRB classes 0-4.In conclusion, procalcitonin levels on admission predict the severity and outcome of community-acquired pneumonia with a similar prognostic accuracy as the CRB-65 score and a higher prognostic accuracy compared with C-reactive protein and leukocyte count. Procalcitonin levels can provide independent identification of patients at low risk of death within CRB-65 (confusion, respiratory rate o30 breaths?min -1 , low blood pressure (systolic value ,90 mmHg or diastolic value f60 mmHg) and age o65 yrs) risk classes.
Background: Endothelin-1 (ET-1), a potent vasoconstrictor, is difficult to measure because of its instability and its binding to receptors and plasma proteins. We report a rapid, robust way to indirectly quantify ET-1 release by measuring the C-terminal ET-1 precursor fragment (CT-proET-1) without an extraction step. Methods: In plasma samples from healthy individuals, patients with congestive heart failure (CHF), and patients with sepsis, we measured CT-proET-1 with a sandwich immunoluminometric assay that uses 2 polyclonal antibodies to amino acids 168 -212 of pre-proET-1. We also correlated CT-proET-1 concentrations with bigET-1 measurements. Results: The assay yielded results within 3 h and showed linear dilution with an analytical detection limit of 0.4 pmol/L and an interlaboratory CV <10% for values >10 pmol/L. Ex vivo CT-proET-1 was stable (<10% loss of immunoreactivity) in EDTA-, heparin-, and citrate-plasma for at least 4 h at room temperature, 6 h at 4°C, and in EDTA-plasma for at least 6 months at ؊20°C. CT-proET-1 values followed a gaussian distribution in healthy individuals (mean, 44.3 pmol/L; range, 10.5-77.4 pmol/L) without significant differences between males and females. The correlation coefficient for CT-proET-1 vs age was 0.25 (P <0.0001). CT-proET1 was significantly (P <0.0001) increased in patients with CHF (median, 104 pmol/L; range, 50.8 -315 pmol/L) and patients with sepsis (median, 189 pmol/L; range, 34.6 -855 pmol/L). The correlation between CT-proET-1 and bigET-1 for 43 samples was 0.80 (P <0.0001).
Background: Aim of this study was to evaluate the correlation of inflammatory markers procalcitonin (PCT), C-reactive protein (CRP) and leukocyte count (WBC) with microbiological etiology of CAP.
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