4.7 Article

Serum biomarkers for identifying acute chest syndrome among patients who have sickle cell disease and present to the emergency department

Journal

PEDIATRICS
Volume 116, Issue 3, Pages E420-E425

Publisher

AMER ACAD PEDIATRICS
DOI: 10.1542/peds.2004-2107

Keywords

emergency medicine; sickle cell disease

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Objective. To compare the accuracy of biomarkers for identifying acute chest syndrome ( ACS) in patients with sickle cell disease presenting to a pediatric emergency department ( ED). Methods. We conducted a 13- month- long ( 2002 - 2003) cohort study with nested case- control in patients with sickle cell disease presenting to the pediatric ED with vaso- occlusive crises or fever in which we compared levels of secretory phospholipase A2 ( sPLA2), endothelin- 1, interleukin- 6 ( IL- 6), and peripheral white blood cell count ( WBC) in cases that were complicated by ACS and in control subjects with uncomplicated illnesses. For diagnosis, a test was considered to be accurate when the area under its receiver operator characteristic curve ( AUC) was > 0.70. Laboratory tests with AUC values >= 0.70 were entered into a binary recursive partitioning model for diagnosis. Results. For the period of study, samples from 72 visits were obtained from 51 patients who presented with vaso- occlusive crises ( range: 1 - 4 visits per patient; 15 were enrolled more than once). ACS complicated 19 of 72 visits ( 26%, 95% confidence interval: 17% - 38%). At an AUC value of 0.79, only the sPLA2 test was accurate for diagnosing ACS. AUC values for peripheral WBC, endothelin- 1, and IL- 6 were 0.68, 0.51, and 0.52, respectively. Binary recursive partitioning retained only sPLA2 at a cutoff of 13.7 ng/ mL to be accurate for diagnosis. This cutoff had a sensitivity of 74% ( 14 of 19), a specificity of 87% ( 46 of 53), a positive likelihood ratio of 5.6, and a negative likelihood ratio of 0.18. Conclusions. Secretory phospholipase A2 but not endothelin- 1, IL- 6, or WBC is an accurate test for identifying present or incipient ACS in young patients who present to the ED with sickle cell pain crises.

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