Presepsin as a Predictor of Positive Blood Culture in Suspected Neonatal Sepsis. | ||||
Minia Journal of Medical Research | ||||
Article 22, Volume 30, Issue 4, October 2019, Page 138-142 PDF (223.12 K) | ||||
Document Type: Original Article | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/mjmr.2022.221700 | ||||
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Authors | ||||
Magdy M. Kamel; Reem A. Abd El Aziz; Mostafa A. El Sayed; Hossam F. Abd-ullah | ||||
Department of Pediatrics, El-Minia Faculty of Medicine | ||||
Abstract | ||||
Introduction: Neonatal sepsis is the most common cause of morbidity and mortality during the neonatal period. Presepsin (P-SEP) is a truncated variant of soluble CD14. Pathogens stimulate P-SEP shedding from the surface of various immune cell types. Aim of the work: to evaluate the accuracy of presepsin as a novel biomarker for bacterial infection diagnosis and correlate its level with blood culture, CRP and procalcitonin (PCT) levels. Methods: This was a comparative prospective study included eighty neonates admitted to NICU. They were divided into two major groups: Group I: it included twenty full term neonates; infants who are born after 37 completed weeks. Group II: it included sixty preterm neonates; infants who are (<37 completed weeks of gestation), it was classified into three subgroups; Group II A 20 Low birth weight neonates: 1501- 2500 gm., Group II B 20Very low birth weight neonates: 1001-1500 gm., Group II C 20 Extremely low birth weight neonates: 500-1000 gm. Results: P-SEP 2 levels were higher in sepsis group than in non-sepsis group. No significant difference in levels of P-SEP 1 was found between the two groups. Presepsin showed more diagnostic accuracy than PCT in diagnosis of sepsis: the best cut-off value for Presepsin was 485pg/ml, with 97.8% sensitivity and 94.1% specificity. There were statistically significant positive correlations between P-SEP 2, PCT and CRP. Conclusion: Serum presepsin has superior accuracy than procalcitonin in diagnosis of neonatal sepsis. Recommendation: Presepsin can be used as a diagnostic and prognostic marker for neonatal sepsis. | ||||
Keywords | ||||
newborn; presepsin; sepsis | ||||
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