Abstract

C-reactive protein (CRP) is used to monitor patients' response during treatment of infectious diseases. Morbidity and mortality associated with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is high, particularly in hospitalized patients. Better risk prediction during hospitalization could improve management and ultimately reduce mortality rates. To evaluate CRP measured at admission and the third day of hospitalization as a predictor for adverse events in CAP. A prospective cohort study of adult patients hospitalized with CAP at an academic hospital. Major adverse outcomes were admission to ICU, mechanical ventilation, prolonged hospital length of stay, hospital complications and 30-day mortality. Predictive associations between CRP (as absolute levels and relative decline at third day) and adverse events were analyzed. Eight hundred and twenty-three patients were assessed, 19% were admitted to ICU and 10.6% required mechanical ventilation. The average hospital stay was 8.8 ± 8.2 days, 42% had nosocomial complications and 8.1% died within 30 days. Ninety eight percent of patients had elevated serum CRP on admission to the hospital (18.1 ± 14.1 mg/dL). C-reactive protein measured at admission was associated with the risk of bacterial pneumonia, bacteremic pneumonia, septic shock and use of mechanical ventilation. Lack of CRP decline within three days of hospitalization was associated with high risk of complications, septic shock, mechanical ventilation and prolonged hospital stay. CRP responses at third day of hospital admission was a valuable predictor of adverse events in hospitalized CAP adult patients.

Highlights

  • C-reactive protein (CRP) is used to monitor patients’ response during treatment of infectious diseases

  • Morbidity and mortality associated with community-acquired pneumonia

  • evaluate CRP measured at admission

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Summary

Background

C-reactive protein (CRP) is used to monitor patients’ response during treatment of infectious diseases. Lack of CRP decline within three days of hospitalization was associated with high risk of complications, septic shock, mechanical ventilation and prolonged hospital stay. Se ha planteado el uso de los biomarcadores, tales como la proteína C reactiva (PCR), procalcitonina y proadrenomedulina séricas, para confirmar el diagnóstico clínico de neumonía en el ámbito ambulatorio, orientar acerca del agente causal (virus vs bacterias), definir la gravedad y el pronóstico de los pacientes hospitalizados por neumonía adquirida en la comunidad[11,12,13]. El propósito del estudio es examinar el rendimiento de la PCR sérica medida en la admisión y al tercer día de hospitalización como factor predictivo de eventos adversos en el adulto inmunocompetente hospitalizado por neumonía adquirida en la comunidad

Pacientes y Métodos
Mortalidad en el hospital
Área bajo la curva
Proteína C reactiva
Findings
Estadía prolongada
Full Text
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