3.9 Article

Evaluation of the Clinical Performance of an Automated Procalcitonin Assay for the Quantitative Detection of Bloodstream Infection

Journal

KOREAN JOURNAL OF LABORATORY MEDICINE
Volume 30, Issue 2, Pages 153-159

Publisher

KOREAN SOC LABORATORY MEDICINE
DOI: 10.3343/kjlm.2010.30.2.153

Keywords

Procalcitonin; C-reactive protein; Sepsis; Bacteremia

Funding

  1. Korea Science and Engineering Foundation through the Medical Science and Engineering Research Center for Cancer Molecular Therapy at Dong-A University [R13-2002-044-05002-0]

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Background : Bloodstream infection (BSI) is associated with a high mortality rate. Since the origin of infection is demonstrated in approximately 2/3rds of cases, early and established biomarkers are warranted. We evaluated the clinical performances of automated procalcitonin (PCT) and C-reactive protein (CRP) assays for the quantitative detection of BSI. Analytical performance of the VIDAS (R) B . R . A . H . M . S PCT assay (bioMerieux, France) was assessed and also compared with the semi-quantitative PCT-Q test (B . R . A . H . M . S Aktiengesellschaft, Germany). Methods : We prospectively included consecutive patients divided into 3 groups at the Dong-A University Medical Center. Patients were categorized according to the criteria of the American College of Chest Physicians/Society of Critical Care Medicine Consensus Conference (ACCP/SCCM), and also on the basis of catheter-associated bacteremia. Results : A total 77 patients were enrolled. All mean values of PCT and PCT-Q were consistent with the reference value. Measured PCT concentrations showed good linearity (r=0.983). The between-run, within-run, and total imprecisions were below 5%. The PCT levels in gram-negative bacteremia were significantly higher than those in gram-positive bacteremia. Furthermore, the PCT concentrations were significantly different among non-infection, bacteremia, sepsis, severe sepsis, and septic shock groups. Our study showed that PCT >0.3 ng/mL had 95.0% sensitivity and 97.3% specificity, whereas CRP >5.46 mg/dL had 85.0% sensitivity and 86.5% specificity for diagnosing sepsis. Conclusions : We suggest that, compared with CRP, PCT is a better diagnostic and discriminative biomarker of sepsis categorized according to the ACCP/SCCM. Moreover, catheter-associated bacteremia could be discriminated from sepsis using PCT concentration. (Korean J Lab Med 2010; 30:153-9)

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