Abstract

Identification of patients with ongoing abdominal infection after emergency surgery for abdominal sepsis is difficult. The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether plasma and abdominal fluid sTREM-1 levels can adequately select patients with ongoing abdominal infection. In a single center retrospective observational study, plasma and abdominal fluid samples were collected every 24 h for 4 days in patients who underwent an emergency laparotomy for severe secondary peritonitis. Patients after elective esophagus surgery served as controls. sTREM-1 levels were measured with an ELISA. Plasma sTREM-1 levels were not elevated compared to controls. Abdominal fluid sTREM-1 levels were initially high (median (246 [IQR 121–455] pg/ml), and declined 24 h after surgery ( P = 0.01). On day 2 and 3, patients with ongoing infection had significantly higher abdominal fluid sTREM-1 levels (319 [180–671] and 245 [173–541] pg/ml, respectively) compared to patients without infection (85 [49–306] and 121 [20–196] pg/ml, respectively). sTREM-1 levels were moderately predictive for persistent infection but had a high negative predictive value (0.86 (95% CI 0.69–0.94) below a cut-off level of 160 pg/ml. In clinical practice, abdominal fluid sTREM-1 levels may be useful for exclusion but not detection of ongoing abdominal infection after surgery for secondary peritonitis.

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