Elevation of serum ferritin levels for predicting a poor outcome in hospitalized patients with influenza infection.

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2020-02-28

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Lalueza, A
Ayuso, B
Arrieta, E
Trujillo, H
Folgueira, D
Cueto, C
Serrano, A
Laureiro, J
Arévalo-Cañas, C
Castillo, C

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Abstract

There is increasing evidence that ferritin is a key marker of macrophage activation, but its potential role in influenza infection remains unexplored. Our aim was to assess whether hyperferritinaemia (ferritin ≥500 ng/mL) could be a marker of poor prognosis in hospitalized patients with confirmed influenza A infection. We prospectively recruited all hospitalized adult patients who tested positive for the influenza A rRT-PCR assay performed on respiratory samples in two consecutive influenza periods (2016-17 and 2017-18). Poor outcome was defined as the presence of at least one of the following: respiratory failure, admission to the intensive care unit, or in-hospital mortality. Among 494 patients, 68 (14%) developed poor outcomes; 112 patients (23%) had hyperferritinaemia (39/68, 57% in the poor-outcome group versus 73/426, 17% in the remaining patients, p  Serum ferritin may discriminate a subgroup of patients with influenza infection who have a higher risk of developing a poor outcome.

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Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Critical Care
Female
Ferritins
Hospital Mortality
Hospitalization
Humans
Influenza A virus
Influenza, Human
Male
Middle Aged
Prognosis
Prospective Studies
Respiratory Insufficiency
Up-Regulation

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Keywords

Ferritin, Hyperferritinaemia, Influenza, Outcome, Respiratory failure

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