Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4256944 Transplantation Proceedings 2013 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundVarious biomarkers have been studied for diagnosing bacterial infections, seeking to stop the sepsis cascade. Presepsin, which is ∼13 kDa in size, has been identified to increase specifically in the blood of sepsis patients. Additionally, measurement of presepsin is useful to evaluate the severity of infection and monitor clinical responses. We evaluated the analytical and clinical performance of the Pathfast presepsin (PFP) assay system for early diagnosis of infection.Materials and MethodsFrom November 2011 to June 2012 we studied 70 adult patients, including 35 cadaveric organ transplant recipients and 35 abdominal surgery patients. The 32 female and 38 male subjects had a mean age of 56.1 years (range, 19–70). Heparinized whole blood for PFP assay was tested at 48 hours after surgery together with blood cultures.ResultsThe mean presepsin level (PL) in the 50 positive patients was 3,957.45 pg/mL (range 255–20,000). For transplant patients, PL was 3,034.43 ± 2,880.791 pg/mL, with 30 positive results. Microbiologic findings confirmed the presence of bacterial infections within 69 ± 2.5 hours from enrollment despite that when the test was performed, 70% showed no sign or symptom of infection. In 15 abdominal surgery patients, the PFP test was negative with negative blood cultures. The positive PFP test in 20 other abdominal surgery patients showed PL of 2,363 ± 7,988.47 pg/mL in the absence of signs or symptoms of infection in 25% of them. The 20 positive patients showed positive blood cultures within 67 ± 1.8 hours from enrollment.ConclusionsThe PFP test had a (100%) sensitivity to show the presence of infection in a short time (15 min), confirmed by positive blood cultures.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Surgery
Authors
, , , , , , , , ,