Procalcitonin kinetics after burn injury and burn surgery in septic and non-septic patients – a retrospective observational study

Abstract Background Early sepsis diagnosis is crucial for the correct management of burn patients, and it clearly influences outcomes. The systemic inflammatory response triggered by burns mimics sepsis presentation and complicates early sepsis diagnosis. Biomarkers were advocated to aid the diagnos...

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Main Authors: Luís Cabral, Vera Afreixo, Rita Meireles, Miguel Vaz, Margarida Marques, Isabel Tourais, Catarina Chaves, Luís Almeida, José Artur Paiva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-09-01
Series:BMC Anesthesiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12871-018-0585-6
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spelling doaj-9fb77fd8b5a44aed9540376dcb7001c02020-11-25T03:53:47ZengBMCBMC Anesthesiology1471-22532018-09-0118111010.1186/s12871-018-0585-6Procalcitonin kinetics after burn injury and burn surgery in septic and non-septic patients – a retrospective observational studyLuís Cabral0Vera Afreixo1Rita Meireles2Miguel Vaz3Margarida Marques4Isabel Tourais5Catarina Chaves6Luís Almeida7José Artur Paiva8Department of Plastic Surgery and Burns Unit, Coimbra University Hospital Centre (CHUC)CIDMA-Center for Research and Development in Mathematics and Applications; iBiMED-Institute for Biomedicine, University of AveiroDepartment of Plastic Surgery and Burns Unit, Coimbra University Hospital Centre (CHUC)Department of Plastic Surgery and Burns Unit, Coimbra University Hospital Centre (CHUC)Department of Anesthesiology, Coimbra University Hospital Centre (CHUC)Department of Anesthesiology, Coimbra University Hospital Centre (CHUC)Department of Clinical Pathology, Coimbra University Hospital Centre (CHUC)MedinUP, Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Faculty of Medicine, University of PortoDepartment of Emergency and Intensive Care Medicine, Centro Hospitalar São JoãoAbstract Background Early sepsis diagnosis is crucial for the correct management of burn patients, and it clearly influences outcomes. The systemic inflammatory response triggered by burns mimics sepsis presentation and complicates early sepsis diagnosis. Biomarkers were advocated to aid the diagnosis of early sepsis. Serum procalcitonin (PCT) exhibits fair accuracy and good correlation with sepsis severity, being used in diverse clinical settings. However, few studies have evaluated perioperative changes in PCT levels in burn patients. The present study evaluated PCT kinetics during the first days after burn injury and subsequent surgical interventions to assess PCT utility in distinguishing septic from non-septic inflammatory responses. Methods This study was a retrospective observational study of all burn patients admitted to the Coimbra Burns Unit (Portugal) between January 2011 and December 2014 who presented with a total burn surface area ≥ 15% and who underwent subsequent surgery. PCT kinetics were investigated a) during the first five days after burn injury and b) preoperatively during the five days after surgery in three subsets of patients, including those with no preoperative and no postoperative sepsis (NN), no preoperative but postoperative sepsis (NS), and preoperative and postoperative sepsis (SS). A total of 145 patients met the selection criteria and were included in the analysis. Results PCT levels in the first five days after burn injury were significantly higher in patients who developed at least one sepsis episode (n = 85) compared with patients who did not develop sepsis (n = 60). PCT values > 1.00 ng/mL were clearly associated with sepsis. Study participants (n = 145) underwent a total of 283 surgical interventions. Their distribution by preoperative/postoperative sepsis status was 142 (50.2%) in NN; 62 (21.9%) in NS; and 79 (27.9%) in SS. PCT values exhibited a parallel course in the three groups that peaked on the second postoperative day and returned to preoperative levels on the third day or later. The lowest PCT values were found in NN, and the highest values were observed in SS; the NS values were intermediate. Conclusions PCT kinetics coupled with a clinical examination may be helpful for sepsis diagnosis during the first days after burn injury and burn surgery.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12871-018-0585-6BurnsSepsisProcalcitoninSurgery
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luís Cabral
Vera Afreixo
Rita Meireles
Miguel Vaz
Margarida Marques
Isabel Tourais
Catarina Chaves
Luís Almeida
José Artur Paiva
spellingShingle Luís Cabral
Vera Afreixo
Rita Meireles
Miguel Vaz
Margarida Marques
Isabel Tourais
Catarina Chaves
Luís Almeida
José Artur Paiva
Procalcitonin kinetics after burn injury and burn surgery in septic and non-septic patients – a retrospective observational study
BMC Anesthesiology
Burns
Sepsis
Procalcitonin
Surgery
author_facet Luís Cabral
Vera Afreixo
Rita Meireles
Miguel Vaz
Margarida Marques
Isabel Tourais
Catarina Chaves
Luís Almeida
José Artur Paiva
author_sort Luís Cabral
title Procalcitonin kinetics after burn injury and burn surgery in septic and non-septic patients – a retrospective observational study
title_short Procalcitonin kinetics after burn injury and burn surgery in septic and non-septic patients – a retrospective observational study
title_full Procalcitonin kinetics after burn injury and burn surgery in septic and non-septic patients – a retrospective observational study
title_fullStr Procalcitonin kinetics after burn injury and burn surgery in septic and non-septic patients – a retrospective observational study
title_full_unstemmed Procalcitonin kinetics after burn injury and burn surgery in septic and non-septic patients – a retrospective observational study
title_sort procalcitonin kinetics after burn injury and burn surgery in septic and non-septic patients – a retrospective observational study
publisher BMC
series BMC Anesthesiology
issn 1471-2253
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Abstract Background Early sepsis diagnosis is crucial for the correct management of burn patients, and it clearly influences outcomes. The systemic inflammatory response triggered by burns mimics sepsis presentation and complicates early sepsis diagnosis. Biomarkers were advocated to aid the diagnosis of early sepsis. Serum procalcitonin (PCT) exhibits fair accuracy and good correlation with sepsis severity, being used in diverse clinical settings. However, few studies have evaluated perioperative changes in PCT levels in burn patients. The present study evaluated PCT kinetics during the first days after burn injury and subsequent surgical interventions to assess PCT utility in distinguishing septic from non-septic inflammatory responses. Methods This study was a retrospective observational study of all burn patients admitted to the Coimbra Burns Unit (Portugal) between January 2011 and December 2014 who presented with a total burn surface area ≥ 15% and who underwent subsequent surgery. PCT kinetics were investigated a) during the first five days after burn injury and b) preoperatively during the five days after surgery in three subsets of patients, including those with no preoperative and no postoperative sepsis (NN), no preoperative but postoperative sepsis (NS), and preoperative and postoperative sepsis (SS). A total of 145 patients met the selection criteria and were included in the analysis. Results PCT levels in the first five days after burn injury were significantly higher in patients who developed at least one sepsis episode (n = 85) compared with patients who did not develop sepsis (n = 60). PCT values > 1.00 ng/mL were clearly associated with sepsis. Study participants (n = 145) underwent a total of 283 surgical interventions. Their distribution by preoperative/postoperative sepsis status was 142 (50.2%) in NN; 62 (21.9%) in NS; and 79 (27.9%) in SS. PCT values exhibited a parallel course in the three groups that peaked on the second postoperative day and returned to preoperative levels on the third day or later. The lowest PCT values were found in NN, and the highest values were observed in SS; the NS values were intermediate. Conclusions PCT kinetics coupled with a clinical examination may be helpful for sepsis diagnosis during the first days after burn injury and burn surgery.
topic Burns
Sepsis
Procalcitonin
Surgery
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12871-018-0585-6
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