Procalcitonin Levels in Identifying Bacterial Infections in Children with and without COVID-19.

Infectious diseases & clinical microbiology Pub Date : 2023-12-29 eCollection Date: 2023-12-01 DOI:10.36519/idcm.2023.300
Grace Fisler, Timothy Brandt, G Amin Ostovar, Matthew D Taylor, Sareen Shah
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Abstract

Objective: Elevated procalcitonin levels have been associated with bacterial infection in children. Observational studies reported high procalcitonin values in COVID-19. Data on bacterial coinfections in pediatric COVID-19 is sparse; small studies suggest a low coinfection rate. In this study, we aimed to quantify the positive predictive value (PPV) of procalcitonin in identifying bacterial infection in children with and without COVID-19.

Materials and methods: A retrospective chart review was performed for 215 children <21 years admitted to our tertiary children's hospital between February 1, 2013, and July 15, 2020, who had procalcitonin levels measured within 48 hours of admission. Confirmed bacterial infection was defined as positive blood, urine, or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) culture, positive endotracheal culture with evidence of leukocytosis on Gram stain, or pneumonia by chest radiograph. Suspected bacterial infection was defined as confirmed bacterial infection or administration of antibiotics for >48 hours.

Results: Of the 215 patients, 73 were admitted for COVID-19 (66% multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children [MIS-C], 34% acute COVID-19). The PPV of an elevated procalcitonin level >1.0 ng/mL in identifying suspected bacterial infections for those with MIS-C was 6.3% (95% CI=0-15), in acute COVID-19 was 29% (95% CI=0-62%), and in the non-COVID-19 cohort was 75% (95% CI=62-88%). For identification of confirmed bacterial infection, PPV of an elevated procalcitonin level was 0% in MIS-C, 14% (95% CI=0-40%) in acute COVID-19, and 55% (95% CI=40-69%) in the non-COVID-19 cohort.

Conclusion: We found a low PPV of elevated procalcitonin level above 1 ng/mL in identifying either culture-confirmed or presumed bacterial infection in children hospitalized with COVID-19-related illness.

前降钙素原水平在识别患有和未患有 COVID-19 的儿童细菌感染中的作用。
目的:降钙素原水平升高与儿童细菌感染有关。观察性研究显示 COVID-19 中的降钙素原值较高。有关小儿 COVID-19 中细菌合并感染的数据很少;小型研究表明合并感染率较低。在本研究中,我们旨在量化降钙素原在识别COVID-19患儿和非COVID-19患儿细菌感染时的阳性预测值(PPV):对 215 名患儿的 48 小时病历进行回顾性分析:结果:在215名患者中,73人因COVID-19入院(66%为儿童多系统炎症综合征[MIS-C],34%为急性COVID-19)。降钙素原水平升高 >1.0 纳克/毫升对识别儿童多系统炎症综合征[MIS-C]疑似细菌感染的 PPV 为 6.3%(95% CI=0-15),对识别急性 COVID-19 疑似细菌感染的 PPV 为 29%(95% CI=0-62%),对识别非 COVID-19 疑似细菌感染的 PPV 为 75%(95% CI=62-88%)。对于确诊细菌感染的鉴定,降钙素原水平升高的 PPV 在 MIS-C 中为 0%,在急性 COVID-19 中为 14%(95% CI=0-40%),在非 COVID-19 队列中为 55%(95% CI=40-69%):结论:我们发现,降钙素原水平升高超过1纳克/毫升时,在识别因COVID-19相关疾病住院的儿童中经培养确诊或推测的细菌感染方面的PPV较低。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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