I n this issue of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Lenihan et al (1) evaluate the utility of adding the blood biomarkers mid-regional proadrenomedullin (MR-proADM) and procalcitonin to the Pediatric Early Warning Score (PEWS) to risk stratify children who present to the emergency department (ED) with fever. They performed an unplanned secondary analysis of a study of 1,183 febrile children less than 16 years old who underwent blood sampling as part of their ED evaluation. The outcomes included ICU admission, need for fluid resuscitation, and presence of definite or probable bacterial infection as defined by an algorithmic approach. Primary study enrollment occurred at a single center between 2010 and 2012, and blood samples were banked at that time and later used for this analysis (2).The authors' attempt to identify prognostic biomarkers in a broad cohort of febrile children is laudable, as febrile illness continues to be one of the most common reasons for children to seek emergency care and recognition of sepsis/ organ dysfunction and determination of infectious etiology are ongoing challenges for emergency providers. In addition, the concept of using biomarkers to augment a clinical warning score is a strategy that has precedent in the literature (3, 4) and is likely to prove even more successful in coming years, particularly as increasingly granular clinical data and "omic" level biological data become feasible to use in the clinical space.Similar to prior work in adults and children with sepsis and lower respiratory tract infections (5, 6, 7), these investigators found that elevations of both procalcitonin and MR-proADM were associated with PICU admission, fluid resuscitation, and presumed bacterial infection, whereas elevation of MR-proADM in the setting of low procalcitonin was associated only with fluid resuscitation. These results may be explained by the fact that the association between MR-proADM and disease severity is likely less etiology-dependent than procalcitonin. In adults with community-acquired pneumonia, MR-proADM levels were similar among patients infected with viruses, typical bacteria, and mixed infections, with no association between MR-proADM and etiology (8). This contrasts with procalcitonin which tends to be elevated more frequently in bacterial infections, as virus-stimulated macrophage synthesis of interferon-alpha inhibits tumor necrosis factor synthesis and procalcitonin expression (9, 10). As most febrile illnesses in children are viral and children can have severe illness due to viral infections, MR-proADM will theoretically be elevated in severe disease (e.g., need for fluid resuscitation) regardless of etiology.