Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

ICU, Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital, Hong Kong

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "ICU, Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital, Hong Kong"— Presentation transcript:

1 ICU, Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital, Hong Kong
Sepsis markers Dr. Natalie Leung 6th January 2012 ICU, Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital, Hong Kong

2 Introduction Sepsis can occur suddenly and deteriorate rapidly
Timely diagnosis of sepsis is the key of success

3 However…… can sometimes be challenging

4 How to improve the outcome of sepsis?
Early diagnosis and treatment Surviving Sepsis Campaign reduction in mortality rate of severe sepsis.

5 Septic shock: Mortality risk and time
Early diagnosis is a key to reduce mortality Duration of hypotension before initiation of effective antimicrobial therapy is the critical determinant of survival in human septic shock Crit Care Med 2006;34:

6 Sepsis markers Diagnostic Assessing the response to therapy Prognostic
Useful for identifying or ruling out sepsis Identifying patients who may benefit from specific therapies Assessing the response to therapy Prognostic

7

8 Ideal sepsis markers High sensitivity (increase pathologically in the presence of disease) High specificity (does not increase in the absence of disease) Related to the disease burden and extent Changes in accordance with the clinical evolution Anticipates clinical changes before it happens

9 Ideal sepsis markers Adds independent information about the risk or prognosis Reproducible Easy and cheap

10 What do we have now? WCC Lactate Biomarkers Tissue perfusion variables
C-reactive protein (CRP) Procalcitonin (PCT) Cytokines New markers

11 What do we have now? A review of sepsis biomarkers
178 different biomarkers Most of them had been tested clinically Primiarily as prognostic markers Relatively few have been used for diagnosis Sepsis biomarkers: a review. Critical Care. 2010; 14(1): R15

12 What do we have now? Large numbers of markers Cytokines
Receptors biomarkers Coagulation biomarkers Biomarkers related to vascular endothelial damage Markers related to organ dysfunction Acute phase protein biomarkers others Sepsis biomarkers: a review Crit Care. 2010; 14(1): R15

13

14 Sepsis biomarkers: a review Crit Care. 2010; 14(1): R15

15 Sepsis biomarkers: a review Crit Care. 2010; 14(1): R15

16 Sepsis markers Lactate C-reactive protein (CRP) Procalcitonin (PCT)
Newer sepsis markers

17 Sepsis markers Lactate C-reactive protein (CRP) Procalcitonin (PCT)
Newer sepsis markers

18 Lactate production Critical illness leading to increased tissue oxygen extraction Oxygen delivery Oxygen consumption Oxygen debt Global tissue hypoxia Anaerobic metabolism Lactate production

19 Lactate Raised in severe sepsis and septic shock
Hypoperfusion (secondary to anaerobic metabolism) Cellular metabolic failure Decrease clearance by the liver

20 Numerous studies have established that lactate is a good marker of global hypoxia in circulatory shock

21

22 Use of lactate as a sepsis marker
Diagnosis Prognostic and predict mortality

23 Diagnosis Limited role in diagnostic
Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines 2008 “begin resuscitation immediately in patients with hypotension/ elevated serum lactate >=4mmol/l”

24 Prognostic and predict mortality
It can be used as … Monitoring response of septic patients to resuscitation Stratification and prognosis Serial lactate level monitoring is recommended High lactate clearance: less required vasopressors therapy, greater improvements in APACHE II scores and decreased mortality rates

25 Lactate clearance In patients with septic shock
Survivors vs non-survivors Initial lactate level did not differ much Survivors had a significant decrease in lactate levels and less “lactate clearance time” Low exogenous lactate clearance as an early predictor of mortality in normolactatemic critically ill septic patients. Crit Care Med. 2003;31(3):

26 Lactate clearance 111ED and ICU patients with severe sepsis and septic shock Lactate clearance The percentage lactate decrease over the initial 6 hr ED evaluation and treatment period Low exogenous lactate clearance as an early predictor of mortality in normolactatemic critically ill septic patients. Crit Care Med. 2003;31(3):

27 Lactate clearance All patients were followed for 72 hrs and received a protocol-driver EGDT Results The higher the lactate clearance, the lower the mortality Low exogenous lactate clearance as an early predictor of mortality in normolactatemic critically ill septic patients. Crit Care Med. 2003;31(3):

28 Single-center cohort study
830 patients Test the association between initial serum lactate level and mortality in patients presenting to AED with severe sepsis is independent of organ dysfunction and shock

29

30

31 Sepsis markers Lactate C-reactive protein (CRP) Procalcitonin (PCT)
Newer sepsis markers

32 CRP Acute phase protein Synthesized in liver
IL-6 (and IL-1 and TNFα) stimulate synthesis Binds bacterial polysaccharide/ chromatin Activates the classical complement pathway Increase the immune inflammatory response Esp. in bacteria infection (vs viral)

33 CRP Level of CRP begins within 4-6hrs after stimulus
Doubles every 8hrs Peaks at hrs Half-life 19hrs

34 CRP A sensitive marker of inflammation and tissue damage
Other conditions result in raised in CRP Rheumatological disease SLE Systemic sclerosis Dermatomyositis Sjogren’s disease Inflammatory bowel disease Haematological disease E.g. leukaemia Graft-versus-host disease

35 CRP

36 CRP as a marker of sepsis resolution
CRP of non-survivors was significantly higher since D3 onward

37

38

39 Sepsis markers Lactate C-reactive protein (CRP) Procalcitonin (PCT)
Newer sepsis markers

40 Procalcitonin A peptide precursor of calcitonin Produced by
parafollicular cells of the thyroid neuroendocrine cells of the lung and the intestine (extrathyroidal) It raises in a response to a proinflammatory stimulus Esp of bacterial origin (mainly from the cells of lung and the intestine)

41 PCT- characteristics Fast response (2-4hrs) Peak values 8-24hr

42 PCT- characteristics Short half-life (~24hrs) independent of renal function Easy to measure in serum and plasma (stable in vivo and in vitro) Plasma concentration ~ < ng/ml

43 In systemic inflammation or in infection
Persists as long as inflammatory process continues Mechanical trauma Increase within 2-4hrs Peak in 1st or 2nd day then diminish

44 Procalcitonin (PCT) Reference values (except newborn) < 0.05ng/ml
Significantly lower in leukopenic patients < 0.05ng/ml Healthy individuals < 0.5ng/ml Probability of sepsis is low, local infection possible 0.5-2ng/ml Grey zone, recheck 6-12hrs later >2ng/ml Probability of sepsis is high

45 Use of PCT Sepsis diagnosis Antibiotic guidance Patient prognosis

46 Sepsis diagnosis Prospective single centre, non-interventional study
Patients > 38C Bruno Riou et al. Critical Care 2007; 11:R60

47

48 Antibiotic therapy Multicentre, prospective, parallel-group, open-label trial 1:1 ratio of procalcitonin (n=311) and control group (n=319)

49 Antibiotics were started/ stopped based on a predefined cut-off ranges of PCT value
Primary end point 28 and 60 days mortality No. of days without antibiotics

50 Primary endpoint: all-cause mortality at 60 days

51

52

53 Antibiotic therapy and prognosis
Charles PE, et al. Critical Care 2009:13;16-20 180 patients PCT levels were obtained at the onset of clinical sepsis (Day 1) and at least twice more within next 3 days Monitor change in PCT levels to assess effectiveness of antibiotic treatment

54 Mortality rates associated with the decline in PCT levels
A 30% decrease in PCT levels between Day 2 and 3 appears to be a good prognostic indicator of effective antibiotic therapy and associated with better survival

55 PCT is also associated with other conditions
VAP Severe acute pancreatitis Acute exacerbation of COPD

56 Nonbacterial infection: Viruses, Fungi, Parasites
PCT tend to be low in viral infection However, in systemic viral infection, PCT value can as high as 16 ng/ml A low serum PCT cannot be used to exclude bacterial from viral infections but that a combination of PCT, CRP, white blood cell count, and clinical illness scoring might be more useful

57 Nonbacterial infection: Viruses, Fungi, Parasites
In patients with fungal infections, results have been variable Infection with the malaria parasite often leads to very high levels of serum, as high as 662 ng/mL

58 Sepsis and PCT: The Pediatric Experience
Complicated by a physiological rise in both term and preterm, healthy infants, which peaks at approximately 24 h and returns to normal by day 3

59 Sepsis and PCT: The Pediatric Experience
Variable in sensitivity and specificity Some authors recommended against the use of PCT in routine diagnosis of bacterial sepsis in neonates, because of more complicated PCT measurement and its expense in comparison with CRP.

60 Different features of CRP and PCT
CRP levels may not further increase during more severe stages of sepsis. PCT rises in proportion to the severity of sepsis and reaches its highest levels in septic shock. Therefore, the diagnostic capacity of PCT is superior to that of CRP due to the close correlation between PCT levels and the severity of sepsis and outcome.

61 Different features of CRP and PCT
PCT reacted more quickly than CRP PCT concentrations had their maximum levels prior to those of CRP Allows anticipation of a diagnosis of sepsis hours before the CRP level would Procalcitonin and C-reactive protein during systemic inflammatory response syndrome, sepsis and organ dysfunction Crit Care. 2004; 8(4): 234–42.

62

63 Sepsis markers Lactate C-reactive protein (CRP) Procalcitonin (PCT)
Newer sepsis markers

64 New sepsis markers Soluble CD14 subtype (Generic name- Presepsin)
Heparin-Binding protein Others

65 Soluble CD14 subtype

66

67 Early diagnosis and prognosis

68 Early diagnosis and prognosis

69 ROC analysis comparing the accuracy for the prediction of 30-day mortality revealed areas under the receiver operating characteristics curve (AUC) for presepsin, APACHE II score and procalcitonin of 0.878, and 0.661, respectively.

70

71 Quick turn around time- for emergency and intensive care use

72 Heparin-binding protein
An early marker of circulatory failure in sepsis Release from activated neutrophils A potent inducer of vascular leakage Resulted in extravasation of plasma and WBC to the focus of infection

73 Clinical Infectious Diseases 2009; 49:1044-50

74 Clinical Infectious Diseases 2009; 49:1044-50

75 HBP is an early diagnostic and prognostic marker

76 How about other markers?

77 TNF-a The initiating factor in the activation of host response and subsequent cytokine release during infection Concentration increase 24 times after LPS challenge during in vivo experimental endotoxemia

78 However, the diagnostic utility of TNF is insufficient for distinguishing infectious inflammation
Why? Short half-life of 17 min Short-term concentration in response to bacterial challenge

79 Interleukin-6 Increased concentrations correlating to infection
Activation time: very short Half-life time ~ 1hr Sensitive early diagnosis of neonatal sepsis Adult values Sepsis ng/L SIRS 100ng/L Usefulness in adult diagnosis has not well established. Interleukin-6 concentrations in neonatal sepsis. Lancet 353; 9148:

80 Conclusion Sepsis is associated with significant mortality and morbidity Sepsis markers can aid in the diagnosis of sepsis It may provide prognostic value Many new sepsis markers are under investigation

81 Procalcitonin is a well-established biomarker of sepsis that fulfills several criteria of clinical needs it responds both to infection and severity of infection antibiotic treatment can also be guided by PCT Prognostic value

82 Surviving Sepsis Campaign: International guidelines for management of severe sepsis and septic shock: Critical Care Medicine 2008; 36:

83 The End Thank you

84

85

86 Different features of CRP and PCT
CRP concentrations were high already during the less severe stages of organ dysfunction and systemic inflammation values were not much further increased during the more severe stages of disease. PCT levels correlates with the stages of disease (especially increased in patients with organ dysfunction, severe sepsis or septic shock.) CRP less useful in distinguishing evolution of sepsis in severe sepsis and septic shock Procalcitonin and C-reactive protein during systemic inflammatory response syndrome, sepsis and organ dysfunction Crit Care. 2004; 8(4): 234–42.

87 Different features of CRP and PCT
PCT concentrations more rapidly declined as compared with CRP CRP remained high even in the late stage of disease Procalcitonin and C-reactive protein during systemic inflammatory response syndrome, sepsis and organ dysfunction Crit Care. 2004; 8(4): 234–42.

88

89 Prognosis PCT levels were significantly associated with
admission to a special care unit duration of intravenous antibiotic use total duration of antibiotic treatment length of hospital stay, whereas CRP was related only to the latter two variables. These data suggest that PCT may be a valuable addition to currently used markers of infection for diagnosis of infection and prognosis in patients with fever at the AED Critical Care Med 2010; 38:457–463

90 Clinical Infectious Diseases 2009; 49:1044-50

91


Download ppt "ICU, Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital, Hong Kong"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google