4.6 Article

Inter-α inhibitor proteins in infants and decreased levels in neonatal sepsis

Journal

JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS
Volume 143, Issue 1, Pages 11-15

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/S0022-3476(03)00190-2

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Objective Adjunctive tests are needed to predict sepsis in the newborn and to lower the rate or duration of unnecessary antibiotic use. We evaluated the normal Inter-alpha inhibitor protein (IalphaIp) values in infants and the association of plasma levels of IalphaIp with sepsis in term and preterm newborns. Methods Plasma IalphaIp levels were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in samples from 135 newborn infants at a wide range of gestational ages (24-42 weeks). IalphaIp levels were also determined in 19 infants undergoing prospective evaluation for sepsis. Results IalphaIp levels in umbilical cord blood and circulating peripheral blood of healthy newborn infants (525 +/- 66 mg/L) were not significantly different from the level in healthy adults (691 80 mg/L). IalphaIp levels were similar in infants between 24 and 42 weeks gestational age. There was a significant reduction in IaIp levels in infants with sepsis compared with nonseptic controls (169 +/- 126 mg/L vs 613 +/- 286 mg/L, P <.0001). Conclusions IalphaIp levels in the blood of newborns are independent of gestational age and similar to adults. IalphaIp levels are significantly reduced in infants with bacterial sepsis and might serve as an adjunctive diagnostic marker to allow prospective reduction of antibiotic use.

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