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      Longitudinal Neutrophil Cd64 Expression As a Biomarker For Acute Infection and Severity of Disease in Critically Ill Patients

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      , , , ,
      Intensive Care Medicine Experimental
      Springer International Publishing
      ESICM LIVES 2015
      3-7 October 2015

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          Abstract

          Introduction Cluster of Differentiation 64 (CD64) antigen is a membrane glycoprotein expressed on monocytes and macrophages. It is the high affinity neutrophil FcγRI receptor which is weakly expressed by neutrophils at physiological levels, but strongly upregulated within 4-6 hours by the pleiotropic cytokines such as Interferon-γ (IFN-γ) and Granulocyte Colony Stimulating Factor (G-CSF) which are produced in sepsis [1]. CD64 can be used as a diagnostic marker of bacterial infection and sepsis using flow cytometry. Objectives The primary goal of this study was to determine whether CD64 is a useful biomarker for sepsis in adult critically ill patients. Secondly, since longitudinal data of CD64 expression are limited in the critically ill patient, a further goal was to clarify longitudinal expression patterns of CD64 on neutrophils with regard to outcome and sepsis severity. Methods A prospective observational study between August 2011 and March 2013 in 155 consecutive patients who were admitted with sepsis, severe sepsis or septic shock was performed in a mixed medical-surgical ICU in a university hospital in the Netherlands. CD64 analysis were performed daily until discharge from ICU or death. Demographics, clinical, laboratory data and outcome defined as 28-day survival were recorded. They were included within 24 hours from start of antibiotic treatment. Results Hundred-and-fifty-five consecutive patients were enrolled. Patients with a sepsis (1.53; 1.00-2.77) showed a lower CD64 index than patients with a severe sepsis and septic shock (2.66 ;1.36-4.49) p = 0.004. Furthermore a peak value on day two and subsequently a steady decline in all three groups was seen, independent of outcome. A significant difference in CD64 at baseline of 2.65 [1.37-4.47] versus 1.74 [0.97-3.16] (p = 0.002) was seen between patients with a positive culture and negative culture at admission, respectively. This difference persisted until two days after inclusion. CD64 index was associated with severity in organ failure (SOFA-score). the higher the SOFA score, the higher the CD64 index measured at the same day. Analysis showed no significant difference during the first 14 days with regard to CD64 index for 28-day mortality between survivors versus non-survivors, although, towards the end, non-survivors are showing higher levels. Conclusions This prospective study demonstrated that CD64 expression could be of diagnostic support, in addition to current tests in discriminating between critically ill patients with culture positive- and negative sepsis. Furthermore, CD64 expression correlates with severity of disease expressed as the daily SOFA-score, however, CD64 index was not a good predictor for 28-day mortality in the critically ill patient. Figure 1 Longitudinal CD64 expression in survivors versus non-survivors. Figure 2 Longitudinal CD64 expression in patients with sepsis, SS and shock.

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          CD64 surface expression on neutrophils is transiently upregulated in patients with septic shock.

          To clarify the changes in total leukocyte counts, CD64 neutrophil receptor expression and serum granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) concentrations in critically ill patients without infection and sepsis and in patients with septic shock. Prospective study. Intensive care unit (ICU) and research laboratory of a university hospital. Eleven critically ill patients without infections and 22 patients with proven infections in septic shock for the first time and of at least 3 days' duration. Over a 6month period, a longitudinal analysis of expression of the monomeric Fc receptor type I (CD64, FcgammaRI) on neutrophils was performed by flow cytometric analysis on a daily basis in all postoperative/post-traumatic patients admitted to the ICU until discharge from the ICU or death. Out of 273 patients, 11 patients without sepsis had organ failure and 22 patients with proven infections had septic shock for the first time and of at least 3 days' duration. Ten out of the 22 patients survived, 12 died. CD64 expression was greater in patients with septic shock than in patients without sepsis. Moreover, CD64 expression was only initially and transiently elevated in most survivors (9/10) and non-survivors (8/12) of septic shock. In survivors, G-CSF serum concentrations were markedly decreased in the 2nd week. Decreased neutrophil CD64 expression in an acutely ill population with septic shock may reflect the development of a non-responsive state as well as the early downregulation of neutrophil activation prior to the resolution of an ongoing infection.
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            Author and article information

            Conference
            Intensive Care Med Exp
            Intensive Care Med Exp
            Intensive Care Medicine Experimental
            Springer International Publishing (Cham )
            2197-425X
            1 October 2015
            1 October 2015
            December 2015
            : 3
            Issue : Suppl 1 Issue sponsor : The publication charges for this supplement were funded by Intensive Care Medicine Experimental.
            : A521
            Affiliations
            [ ]VU University Medical Center, Intensive Care, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
            [ ]UMC Utrecht, Intensive Care, Utrecht, the Netherlands
            [ ]UMC Utrecht, Department of Clinical Chemistry, Utrecht, the Netherlands
            Article
            665
            10.1186/2197-425X-3-S1-A521
            4797388
            b33e6448-ad4e-4a90-9ccd-1fcc57b9abab
            © de Jong et al.; 2015

            This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

            ESICM LIVES 2015
            Berlin, Germany
            3-7 October 2015
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            © The Author(s) 2015

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