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Agenda

 

9 - 12 March 2010

ISICEM International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine - Brussels (Belgium)

ISICEM

 

9 -11 June 2010

EACTA European Association of Cardiothoracic Anaesthesiologists - Edinburgh (UK)

EACTA

 

12-15 June 2010

ESA European Society of Anaesthesiology - Helsinki (Finland)

ESA

 

18-22 September 2010

ERS European Respiratory Society - Barcellona (Spain)

ERS

 

9 -13 October 2010

ESICM European Society of Intensive Care Medicine - Barcellona (Spain)

ESICM

  

 

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DIAGNOSTIC IMPLICATIONS OF SOLUBLE TRIGGERING RECEPTOR EXPRESSED ON MYELOID CELLS 1 IN BAL FLUID OF PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 08 May 2009
Anand NJ, Zuick S, Klesney-Tait J, Kollef MH.
Washington University School of Medicine,St. Louis, USA.
Chest. 2009 Mar;135(3):641-7.

OBJECTIVE: Prospective single-center study to determine whether the presence of soluble triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-1 (sTREM-1) has diagnostic utility in patients with pulmonary infiltrates receiving mechanical ventilation and undergoing BAL. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study.

SETTING: Barnes-Jewish Hospital, a 1,200-bed urban teaching hospital. PATIENTS: Adult patients with acute respiratory failure undergoing BAL for pulmonary infiltrates.

 INTERVENTIONS: BAL fluid measurement of sTREM-1 concentration using a Quantikine Human TREM-1 Immunoassay (R&D Systems; Minneapolis, MN). Measurements and main results: A total of 105 consecutive patients receiving mechanical ventilation and undergoing BAL were enrolled. Of those, 19 patients (18.1%) met definite microbiologic criteria for bacterial or fungal ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP). Though the mean sTREM-1 concentration was greater in patients with definite VAP (n = 19; 171.9 +/- 158.7 pg/mL) than in patients with definite absence of VAP (n = 21; 96.7 +/- 76.2 pg/mL), this difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.06). A cutoff value for sTREM-1 > 200 pg/mL yielded a diagnostic sensitivity of 42.1% and a specificity of 75.6% for definite VAP. Patients with alveolar hemorrhage had the greatest values for sTREM-1 concentration (n = 9; 555 +/- 440 pg/mL). Receiver operating curve analysis and multivariate logistic regression analysis demonstrated that measurement of sTREM-1 was inferior to clinical parameters for the diagnosis of VAP.

CONCLUSIONS: Measurement of sTREM-1 in BAL fluid appears to have minimal diagnostic value for VAP.

Last Updated ( Friday, 08 May 2009 )
 
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