4.6 Article

Association of Procalcitonin to Albumin Ratio with the Presence and Severity of Sepsis in Neonates

Journal

JOURNAL OF INFLAMMATION RESEARCH
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages 2313-2321

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/JIR.S358067

Keywords

procalcitonin-to-albumin ratio; neonatal sepsis; severe sepsis; predictor

Categories

Funding

  1. Key Research, Development, and Promotion Projects of Henan Province [222102310171, 222102310328, 222102310067]
  2. Medical Science and Technology Project of Henan Province [LHGJ20200633, LHGJ20200666, LHGJ20210681, LHGJ20210637, LHGJ20210654, LHGJ20210665, LHGJ20210672, LHGJ20210661]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study aimed to investigate the association between procalcitonin to albumin ratio (PAR) and neonatal sepsis. The results showed that PAR was significantly higher in neonates with sepsis and was correlated with the severity of the disease. Increased PAR was found to be an independent predictor for identifying the presence and severity of neonatal sepsis.
Purpose: Previous studies have demonstrated that procalcitonin and albumin have a close correlation with sepsis. However, the role of procalcitonin (PCT) to albumin (ALB) ratio (PAR) in sepsis was still unclear, especially in neonates. Thus, this study aimed to investigate the association between PAR and neonatal sepsis. Patients and Methods: A total of 1,196 neonates with suspected sepsis were included in this study. Neonates were divided into control group and sepsis group, according to whether they were diagnosed with sepsis. Neonates with sepsis were further divided into mild sepsis and severe sepsis group according to the severity of sepsis. PAR was calculated as serum PCT (ng/mL)/ALB (mg/mL). All statistical analyses were performed using the statistical package SPSS 24.0, as appropriate. Results: Compared with the control group, neonates with sepsis had a higher PAR. PAR also showed a significant gradual increase in the control, mild sepsis, and severe sepsis groups (P<0.001). Correlation analysis showed that there was a strong positive correlation between PAR and hsCRP, neonatal sequential organ failure assessment score (nSOFA), and prolonged length of hospital stay (P 0.001). On multiple logistic regression, higher PAR was independently associated with the presence and severity of neonatal sepsis. According to the receiver operating characteristic curve analysis, a PAR 0.001) and a PAR 0.070 had 69% sensitivity and 63% specificity in predicting the presence of severe sepsis (AUC=0.71, 95% CI=0.68- Conclusion: PAR is significantly higher in neonates with sepsis and correlated with the severity of the disease. Increased PAR is an independent predictor useful for identifying the presence and severity of neonatal sepsis.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available