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Inflammatory and stress markers predicting pneumonia, outcome, and etiology in patients with stroke: Biomarkers for predicting pneumonia, functional outcome, and death after stroke.

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Date

2020-02-25

Authors

Hotter, Benjamin
Hoffmann, Sarah
Ulm, Lena
Montaner, Joan
Bustamante, Alejandro
Meisel, Christian
Meisel, Andreas

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Wolters Kluwer Health
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Abstract

Prognosis of stroke is negatively affected by complications, in particular stroke-associated pneumonia (SAP). We hypothesized that inflammatory and stress biomarkers predict SAP during hospitalization and outcome 3 months after stroke. We pooled the clinical data of 2 acute stroke studies with identical assessment: the STRoke Adverse outcome is associated WIth NoSoKomial Infections (STRAWINSKI) and PREDICT studies. Measurement of biomarkers (ultrasensitive procalcitonin [PCTus]; midregional pro-adrenomedullin; midregional pro-atrial natriuretic peptide [MRproANP]; ultrasensitive copeptin [CPus]; C-terminal pro-endothelin) was performed from serum samples drawn on the first 4 days of hospital admission. The combined cohort consists of 573 cases with available backup samples to perform the analysis. SAP was associated with increased admission and maximum levels of all biomarkers. Furthermore, all biomarkers were associated with death and correlated with functional outcome 3 months after stroke. The multivariate logistic regression model retained ultrasensitive CPus and PCTus beyond clinical risk factors for predicting SAP, improving the receiver operating characteristic area under the curve (AUC) from 0.837 to 0.876. In contrast, the biomarkers did not improve the prediction of death and functional outcome in the multivariate model. Cardioembolic strokes were significantly associated with higher values of all biomarkers, whereas discrimination was best for MRproANP (AUC = 0.811 for maximum value). The tested biomarkers are associated with SAP and poor functional outcome. However, these biomarkers only slightly improve prediction of SAP and do not improve long-term outcome prediction over clinical parameters. MRproANP showed the best discrimination for identifying cardioembolic stroke, warranting further studies to confirm our finding. clinicaltrials.gov NCT01264549 and NCT01079728.

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MeSH Terms

Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Cohort Studies
Embolic Stroke
Female
Humans
Male
Outcome Assessment, Health Care
Pneumonia
Stress, Psychological

DeCS Terms

Biomarcadores
Accidente cerebrovascular
Área bajo la curva
Muerte
Accidente cerebrovascular embólico
Factor natriurético atrial
Suero
Factores de riesgo
Curva ROC
Adrenomedulina

CIE Terms

Keywords

Ischemic Stroke, Inflammation, Middle Aged, Prognosis

Citation

Hotter B, Hoffmann S, Ulm L, Montaner J, Bustamante A, Meisel C, et al. Inflammatory and stress markers predicting pneumonia, outcome, and etiology in patients with stroke: Biomarkers for predicting pneumonia, functional outcome, and death after stroke. Neurol Neuroimmunol Neuroinflamm. 2020 Feb 25;7(3):e692.