The Host Response in Patients with Sepsis Developing Intensive Care Unit-acquired Secondary Infections
- PMID: 28107024
- DOI: 10.1164/rccm.201606-1225OC
The Host Response in Patients with Sepsis Developing Intensive Care Unit-acquired Secondary Infections
Abstract
Rationale: Sepsis can be complicated by secondary infections. We explored the possibility that patients with sepsis developing a secondary infection while in the intensive care unit (ICU) display sustained inflammatory, vascular, and procoagulant responses.
Objectives: To compare systemic proinflammatory host responses in patients with sepsis who acquire a new infection with those who do not.
Methods: Consecutive patients with sepsis with a length of ICU stay greater than 48 hours were prospectively analyzed for the development of ICU-acquired infections. Twenty host response biomarkers reflective of key pathways implicated in sepsis pathogenesis were measured during the first 4 days after ICU admission and at the day of an ICU-acquired infection or noninfectious complication.
Measurements and main results: Of 1,237 admissions for sepsis (1,089 patients), 178 (14.4%) admissions were complicated by ICU-acquired infections (at Day 10 [6-13], median with interquartile range). Patients who developed a secondary infection showed higher disease severity scores and higher mortality up to 1 year than those who did not. Analyses of biomarkers in patients who later went on to develop secondary infections revealed a more dysregulated host response during the first 4 days after admission, as reflected by enhanced inflammation, stronger endothelial cell activation, a more disturbed vascular integrity, and evidence for enhanced coagulation activation. Host response reactions were similar at the time of ICU-acquired infectious or noninfectious complications.
Conclusions: Patients with sepsis who developed an ICU-acquired infection showed a more dysregulated proinflammatory and vascular host response during the first 4 days of ICU admission than those who did not develop a secondary infection.
Keywords: ICU-acquired infection; biomarker; host response; intensive care unit; sepsis.
Comment in
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Simultaneously Mounted Pro- and Anti-inflammatory Host Response Relates to the Development of Secondary Infections in Patients with Sepsis.Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2017 Aug 15;196(4):406-407. doi: 10.1164/rccm.201701-0253ED. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2017. PMID: 28809516 No abstract available.
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Dysregulated Systemic Inflammation Favors Bacterial Growth and Development of Nosocomial Infections.Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2018 Apr 15;197(8):1092. doi: 10.1164/rccm.201709-1867LE. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2018. PMID: 29216435 No abstract available.
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