Prognostic role of clinical and laboratory criteria to identify early ventilator-associated pneumonia in brain injury. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: We investigated the role of the clinical pulmonary infection score (CPIS), serum levels of procalcitonin (PCT), C-reactive protein (CRP), and serum amyloid A (SAA) in the detection of patients with early ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP). METHODS: Observational study in a university hospital. In 58 patients with severe brain injury receiving mechanical ventilation, CPIS, PCT, CRP and SAA were evaluated at ICU entry and at days 3 to 4 of hospital stay for VAP diagnosis (confirmed by endotracheal aspirate or BAL cultures). RESULTS: We found the following: (1) PCT at entry was increased in patients who later had early VAP develop (25 patients) compared to no VAP (median, 1.4 ng/mL; 25-75 percentiles, 0.14-0.78; vs median, 0.2 ng/mL; 25-75 percentiles, 0.76-2.4, p<0.001; sensitivity, 76%; and specificity, 75%); (2) CPIS increased at the day of VAP diagnosis, compared to entry (median, 6.6+/-1.1 vs 1.5+/-1.1, p<0.001; sensitivity, 97%; specificity, 100%), while other serum inflammatory markers did not change; and (3) deterioration in oxygenation and changes in tracheal secretions were the main determinants of CPIS changes. CONCLUSIONS: PCT may be a useful marker to predict which patients subsequently have early VAP. The CPIS could help as an early way to detect the patients with early VAP and who need further diagnostic testing.

publication date

  • April 10, 2008

Research

keywords

  • Brain Injuries
  • C-Reactive Protein
  • Calcitonin
  • Pneumonia, Ventilator-Associated
  • Protein Precursors
  • Serum Amyloid A Protein
  • Ventilators, Mechanical

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 47549084857

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1378/chest.07-2546

PubMed ID

  • 18403669

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 134

issue

  • 1