Abstract
We evaluated the clinical utility of a new endotoxin-specific chromogenic limulus test in febrile patients with haematological malignancies. The specificity is assured by the removal of factor G, which is sensitive to (1→3)-β- d-glucan, from horseshoe crab amoebocyte lysate. The sensitivity and specificity of the test to systemic gram-negative bacterial infections were 69.7 and 96.3%, respectively. Meanwhile, gram-negative bacteria grew in only 39.7% of endotoxaemic samples. Thus, it seems appropriate to consider gram-negative bacteraemia and endotoxaemia as different entities. Endotoxaemia was significantly associated with septic shock and infectious death, especially in patients with neutropenia. The new test, the results of which are available within 3 h, should help physicians to recognise this ominous sign early and to initiate a prompt countermeasure to endotoxaemia.
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