Abstract

The clinical diagnosis of acute infections in the emergency department is a challenging task due to the similarity in symptom presentation between virally and bacterially infected individuals, while the use of routine laboratory tests for pathogen identification is often time-consuming and may contain contaminants. We investigated the ability of various anemia-related parameters, including hemoglobin, red cell distribution width (RDW), and iron, to differentiate between viral and bacterial infection in a retrospective study of 3883 patients admitted to the emergency department with a confirmed viral (n = 1238) or bacterial (n = 2645) infection based on either laboratory tests or microbiological cultures. The ratio between hemoglobin to RDW was found to be significant in distinguishing between virally and bacterially infected patients and outperformed other anemia measurements. Moreover, the predictive value of the ratio was high even in patients presenting with low C-reactive protein values (< 21mg/L). We followed the dynamics of hemoglobin, RDW, and the ratio between them up to 72h post emergency department admission, and observed a consistent discrepancy between virally and bacterially infected patients over time. Additional analysis demonstrated higher levels of ferritin and lower levels of iron in bacterially infected compared with virally infected patients. The anemia measurements were associated with length of hospital stay, where all higher levels, except for RDW, corresponded to a shorter hospitalization period. We highlighted the importance of various anemia measurements as an additional host-biomarker to discern virally from bacterially infected patients.

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