Publication:
Negative predictive value of procalcitonin to rule out bacterial respiratory co-infection in critical covid-19 patients.

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Date

2022-06-30

Authors

Carbonell, Raquel
Urgelés, Silvia
Salgado, Melina
Rodríguez, Alejandro
Reyes, Luis Felipe
Fuentes, Yuli V
Serrano, Cristian C
Caceres, Eder L
Bodí, María
Martín-Loeches, Ignacio

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Abstract

Procalcitonin (PCT) and C-Reactive Protein (CRP) are useful biomarkers to differentiate bacterial from viral or fungal infections, although the association between them and co-infection or mortality in COVID-19 remains unclear. The study represents a retrospective cohort study of patients admitted for COVID-19 pneumonia to 84 ICUs from ten countries between (March 2020-January 2021). Primary outcome was to determine whether PCT or CRP at admission could predict community-acquired bacterial respiratory co-infection (BC) and its added clinical value by determining the best discriminating cut-off values. Secondary outcome was to investigate its association with mortality. To evaluate the main outcome, a binary logistic regression was performed. The area under the curve evaluated diagnostic performance for BC prediction. 4635 patients were included, 7.6% fulfilled BC diagnosis. PCT (0.25[IQR 0.1-0.7] versus 0.20[IQR 0.1-0.5]ng/mL, p These biomarkers at ICU admission led to a poor ability to predict BC among patients with COVID-19 pneumonia. Baseline values of PCT

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MeSH Terms

Bacterial Infections
Biomarkers
C-Reactive Protein
COVID-19
Coinfection
Humans
Predictive Value of Tests
Procalcitonin
ROC Curve
Respiratory Tract Infections
Retrospective Studies

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Keywords

Bacterial co-infection, C-reactive protein, Covid-19 pneumonia, Mortality, Procalcitonin

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