11 results on '"van Pelt LJ"'
Search Results
2. Plasma procalcitonin and urine interleukin-8, neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, and calprotectin in the diagnostic process of a urinary tract infection at the emergency department.
- Author
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Middelkoop SJM, Keekstra R, van Pelt LJ, Kampinga GA, Kobold ACM, Ter Maaten JC, and Stegeman CA
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Adult, Aged, 80 and over, Sensitivity and Specificity, Procalcitonin blood, Leukocyte L1 Antigen Complex urine, Leukocyte L1 Antigen Complex blood, Interleukin-8 urine, Interleukin-8 blood, Biomarkers urine, Biomarkers blood, Urinary Tract Infections diagnosis, Urinary Tract Infections urine, Urinary Tract Infections blood, Emergency Service, Hospital, Lipocalin-2 urine, Lipocalin-2 blood
- Abstract
Objectives: This study aimed to assess the usefulness of plasma procalcitonin and urine IL-8 (interleukin-8), NGAL (neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin), and calprotectin for diagnosis of urinary tract infections (UTIs) at the emergency department (ED)., Methods: In adults presenting at the ED with UTI suspicion, biomarker performance was compared with that of routine diagnostics (urine dipstick, automated urinalysis). Patients with a urine catheter, leukopenia, or neither (standard) were analyzed separately., Results: A UTI was clinically diagnosed in 91 of 196 episodes (46.4%) (standard: 29/67 [43.2%]; catheter: 46/73 [63.0%]; leukopenia: 17/60 [28.3%]; four patients had both). Procalcitonin did not discriminate between UTI and no UTI. Urinary biomarker levels were elevated in UTI episodes (median, µg/mmol creatinine: NGAL, 7.8 vs 46.3; IL-8, 6.1 vs 76.6; calprotectin, 23.9 vs 265.4); the three subgroups also had higher levels. Biomarker cut-off values (90% sensitivity) showed low specificity (range 20.8-64.9%) and moderate accuracy (58.6-75.4%). The biomarkers performed similarly to routine diagnostics, except for patients with leukopenia, who exhibited nonsignificantly higher area under the curve values. All urinary biomarkers correlated positively with urine leukocyte count., Conclusion: Plasma procalcitonin could not accurately diagnose UTI. Urine IL-8, NGAL, and calprotectin showed no additional value relative to routine diagnostics, except a minor improvement in patients with leukopenia. These urine biomarkers seem to predominantly reflect leukocyturia., Competing Interests: Declarations of competing interest The authors have no competing interests to declare., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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3. Clinical usefulness of urine Gram stain for diagnosing urinary tract infections at the emergency department.
- Author
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Middelkoop SJM, de Joode AAE, van Pelt LJ, Kampinga GA, Ter Maaten JC, and Stegeman CA
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Young Adult, Urine microbiology, Staining and Labeling methods, Urinary Tract Infections diagnosis, Urinary Tract Infections microbiology, Urinary Tract Infections urine, Emergency Service, Hospital, Gentian Violet, Phenazines, Urinalysis methods, Sensitivity and Specificity
- Abstract
Background: Diagnosis of urinary tract infections (UTIs) is a frequent challenge at the emergency department (ED). The clinical usefulness of the urine Gram stain (GS) is uncertain., Objective: We studied the GS performance to clarify its clinical utility at the ED., Methods: Urine dipstick (UD), automated urinalysis (UF-1000 i ), GS and urine culture (UC) were performed in a cohort of consecutive adults presenting at the ED suspected of a UTI. GS performance was assessed and compared to UD and UF-1000 i., Results: A UTI diagnosis was established in 487/1358 (35.9%) episodes. Sensitivity and specificity for 'many' GS leucocytes was 33.7% and 95.4%; for 'many' GS bacteria 51.3% and 91.0%. GS diagnostic performance by ROC analysis was 0.796 for leucocytes and 0.823 for bacteria. GS bacteria performed better than UD nitrite comparable to UF-1000 i bacteria. GS leucocytes underperformed compared to UD leucocyte esterase and UF-1000 i leucocytes. UC was positive in 455 episodes. GS correctly predicted urine culture of gram-negative rods (PPV 84.6%). Prediction was poor for gram-positive bacteria (PPV 38.4% (cocci), 1.0% (rods))., Conclusion: With the exception of a moderate prediction of gram-negative bacteria in the UC, urine GS does not improve UTI diagnosis at the ED compared to other urine parameters.
- Published
- 2024
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4. Pleural Cryoglobulins.
- Author
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Ünal M, de Reus YA, van de Belt KJG, van Pelt LJ, and Rutgers A
- Subjects
- Humans, Cryoglobulins, Pleura
- Published
- 2024
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5. Influence of gender on the performance of urine dipstick and automated urinalysis in the diagnosis of urinary tract infections at the emergency department.
- Author
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Middelkoop SJM, van Pelt LJ, Kampinga GA, Ter Maaten JC, and Stegeman CA
- Subjects
- Adult, Cohort Studies, Emergency Service, Hospital, Female, Fever, Humans, Male, Sensitivity and Specificity, Urinalysis, Urinary Tract Infections diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are frequently encountered at the Emergency Department (ED). Given the anatomical differences between men and women, we aimed to clarify differences in the diagnostic performance of urinary parameters at the ED., Methods: A cohort study of adults presenting at the ED with fever and/or clinical suspected UTI. Performance of urine dipstick (UD) and automated urinalysis (UF-1000i) were analysed for the total study population and men and women separately. We focused on 1) UTI diagnosis and 2) positive urine culture (UC, ≥10
5 CFU/ml) as outcome., Results: In 360 of 917 cases (39.3%) UTI was established (men/women 35.1%/43.6%). Diagnostic accuracy of UD was around 10% lower in women compared to men. Median automated leucocyte and bacterial count were higher in women compared to men. Diagnostic performance by receiver operating analysis was 0.851 for leucocytes (men/women 0.879/0.817) and 0.850 for bacteria (men/women 0.898/0.791). At 90% sensitivity, cut-off values of leucocyte count (men 60/µL, women 43/µL), and bacterial count (men 75/µL, women 139/µL) showed performance differences in favour of men. In both men and women, diagnostic performance using specified cut-off values was not different between normal and non-normal bladder evacuation. UC was positive in 327 cases (men/women 149/178), as with UTI diagnosis, diagnostic values in men outperformed women., Conclusions: Overall diagnostic accuracy of urinary parameters for diagnosing UTI is higher in men. The described differences in cut-off values for leukocyte and bacterial counts for diagnosing UTI necessitates gender-specific cut-off values, probably reflecting the influence of anatomical and urogenital differences., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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6. A novel haemocytometric COVID-19 prognostic score developed and validated in an observational multicentre European hospital-based study.
- Author
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Linssen J, Ermens A, Berrevoets M, Seghezzi M, Previtali G, van der Sar-van der Brugge S, Russcher H, Verbon A, Gillis J, Riedl J, de Jongh E, Saker J, Münster M, Munnix IC, Dofferhof A, Scharnhorst V, Ammerlaan H, Deiteren K, Bakker SJ, Van Pelt LJ, Kluiters-de Hingh Y, Leers MP, and van der Ven AJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Blood Cell Count instrumentation, Blood Cell Count methods, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 virology, Cohort Studies, Europe, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pandemics, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, SARS-CoV-2 physiology, Young Adult, Blood Cell Count statistics & numerical data, COVID-19 blood, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Hospitals
- Abstract
COVID-19 induces haemocytometric changes. Complete blood count changes, including new cell activation parameters, from 982 confirmed COVID-19 adult patients from 11 European hospitals were retrospectively analysed for distinctive patterns based on age, gender, clinical severity, symptom duration, and hospital days. The observed haemocytometric patterns formed the basis to develop a multi-haemocytometric-parameter prognostic score to predict, during the first three days after presentation, which patients will recover without ventilation or deteriorate within a two-week timeframe, needing intensive care or with fatal outcome. The prognostic score, with ROC curve AUC at baseline of 0.753 (95% CI 0.723-0.781) increasing to 0.875 (95% CI 0.806-0.926) on day 3, was superior to any individual parameter at distinguishing between clinical severity. Findings were confirmed in a validation cohort. Aim is that the score and haemocytometry results are simultaneously provided by analyser software, enabling wide applicability of the score as haemocytometry is commonly requested in COVID-19 patients., Competing Interests: JL, JS, MM is a permanent employee of Sysmex Europe GMBH who provided free of charge study reagents to the study centres. AE, MB, MS, GP, Sv, HR, AV, JG, JR, Ed, IM, AD, VS, HA, KD, SB, LV, YK, ML No competing interests declared, Av has an ad hoc consultancy agreement with Sysmex Europe GMBH who provided free of charge study reagents to the study centres., (© 2020, Linssen et al.)
- Published
- 2020
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7. A novel diagnostic algorithm equipped on an automated hematology analyzer to differentiate between common causes of febrile illness in Southeast Asia.
- Author
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Prodjosoewojo S, Riswari SF, Djauhari H, Kosasih H, van Pelt LJ, Alisjahbana B, van der Ven AJ, and de Mast Q
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Animals, Arbovirus Infections diagnosis, Bacterial Infections diagnosis, C-Reactive Protein analysis, Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Humans, Indonesia, Male, Mice, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Procalcitonin analysis, Prospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, Young Adult, Algorithms, Automation, Laboratory methods, Blood Chemical Analysis methods, Diagnostic Tests, Routine methods, Fever of Unknown Origin diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Distinguishing arboviral infections from bacterial causes of febrile illness is of great importance for clinical management. The Infection Manager System (IMS) is a novel diagnostic algorithm equipped on a Sysmex hematology analyzer that evaluates the host response using novel techniques that quantify cellular activation and cell membrane composition. The aim of this study was to train and validate the IMS to differentiate between arboviral and common bacterial infections in Southeast Asia and compare its performance against C-reactive protein (CRP) and procalcitonin (PCT)., Methodology/principal Findings: 600 adult Indonesian patients with acute febrile illness were enrolled in a prospective cohort study and analyzed using a structured diagnostic protocol. The IMS was first trained on the first 200 patients and subsequently validated using the complete cohort. A definite infectious etiology could be determined in 190 of 463 evaluable patients (41%), including 89 arboviral infections (81 dengue and 8 chikungunya), 94 bacterial infections (26 murine typhus, 16 salmonellosis, 6 leptospirosis and 46 cosmopolitan bacterial infections), 3 concomitant arboviral-bacterial infections, and 4 malaria infections. The IMS detected inflammation in all but two participants. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value (NPV) of the IMS for arboviral infections were 69.7%, 97.9%, 96.9%, and 77.3%, respectively, and for bacterial infections 77.7%, 93.3%, 92.4%, and 79.8%. Inflammation remained unclassified in 19.1% and 22.5% of patients with a proven bacterial or arboviral infection. When cases of unclassified inflammation were grouped in the bacterial etiology group, the NPV for bacterial infection was 95.5%. IMS performed comparable to CRP and outperformed PCT in this cohort., Conclusions/significance: The IMS is an automated, easy to use, novel diagnostic tool that allows rapid differentiation between common causes of febrile illness in Southeast Asia., Competing Interests: I have read the journal's policy and the authors of this manuscript have the following competing interests: AvV and QdM received an unrestricted research grant from Sysmex Corporation.
- Published
- 2019
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8. Additional filtering of blood from a cell salvage device is not likely to show important additional benefits in outcome in cardiac surgery.
- Author
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de Vries AJ, Vermeijden WJ, van Pelt LJ, van den Heuvel ER, and van Oeveren W
- Subjects
- Aged, Coronary Artery Bypass methods, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardial Infarction surgery, Myocardial Infarction therapy, Stroke surgery, Stroke therapy, Treatment Outcome, Blood Transfusion methods, Cardiac Surgical Procedures methods
- Abstract
Background: Several authors and manufacturers of cell salvage devices recommend additional filtering of processed blood before transfusion. There is no evidence to support this practice. Therefore, we compared the clinical outcome and biochemical effects of cell salvage with or without additional filtering., Study Design and Methods: The patients, scheduled for coronary artery bypass grafting, valve replacement, or combined procedures were part of our randomized multicenter factorial study of cell salvage and filter use on transfusion requirements (ISRCTN 58333401). They were randomized to intraoperative cell salvage or cell salvage plus additional WBC depletion filter. We compared the occurrence of major adverse events (combined death/stroke/myocardial infarction) as primary outcome and minor adverse events (renal function disturbances, infections, delirium), ventilation time, and length of stay in the intensive care unit and hospital. We also measured biochemical markers of organ injury and inflammation., Results: One hundred eighty-nine patients had cell salvage, and 175 patients had cell salvage plus filter and completed the study. Demographic data, surgical procedures, and amount of salvaged blood were not different between the groups. There was no difference in the primary outcome with a risk of 6.3% (95% confidence interval [CI], 3.34-11.25) in the cell salvage plus filter group versus 5.8% (95% CI, 3.09-10.45) in the cell salvage group, a relative risk of 1.08 (95% CI, 0.48- 2.43]. There were no differences in minor adverse events and biochemical markers between the groups., Conclusion: The routine use of an additional filter for transfusion of salvaged blood is unlikely to show important additional benefits., (© 2019 AABB.)
- Published
- 2019
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9. The DaXa-inhibition assay: A concept for a readily available, universal aXa assay that measures the direct inhibitory effect of all anti-Xa drugs.
- Author
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van Pelt LJ, Lukens MV, Testa S, Chatelain B, Douxfils J, and Mullier F
- Subjects
- Anticoagulants pharmacology, Humans, Anticoagulants therapeutic use, Factor Xa metabolism, Factor Xa Inhibitors pharmacology
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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10. HDL function is impaired in acute myocardial infarction independent of plasma HDL cholesterol levels.
- Author
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Annema W, Willemsen HM, de Boer JF, Dikkers A, van der Giet M, Nieuwland W, Muller Kobold AC, van Pelt LJ, Slart RH, van der Horst IC, Dullaart RP, Tio RA, and Tietge UJ
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- Acute Disease, Adult, Aged, Amine Oxidase (Copper-Containing) metabolism, C-Reactive Protein analysis, Cell Adhesion Molecules metabolism, Creatine Kinase blood, Creatine Kinase, MB Form blood, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Gene Expression drug effects, Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells, Humans, Linear Models, Macrophages metabolism, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha pharmacology, Cholesterol, HDL blood, Myocardial Infarction diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: High-density lipoproteins (HDLs) protect against the development of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. HDL function represents an emerging concept in cardiovascular research., Objective: This study investigated the association between HDL functionality and acute myocardial infarction (MI) independent of HDL-cholesterol plasma levels., Methods: Participants (non-ST-segment elevation MI, non-STEMI, n = 41; STEMI, n = 37; non-MI patients, n = 33) from a prospective follow-up study enrolling patients with acute chest pain were matched for age and plasma HDL cholesterol. The in vitro capacity of HDL to (1) mediate cholesterol efflux from macrophage foam cells, (2) prevent low-density lipoprotein oxidation, and (3) inhibit TNF-α-induced vascular adhesion molecule-1 expression in endothelial cells was determined., Results: STEMI-HDL displayed reduced cholesterol efflux (P < .001) and anti-inflammatory functionality (P = .001), whereas the antioxidative properties were unaltered. Cholesterol efflux correlated with the anti-inflammatory HDL activity (P < .001). Not C-reactive protein levels, a marker of systemic inflammation, but specifically plasma myeloperoxidase levels were independently associated with impaired HDL function (efflux: P = .022; anti-inflammation: P < .001). Subjects in the higher risk quartile of efflux (odds ratio [OR], 5.66; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.26-25.00; P = .024) as well as anti-inflammatory functionality of HDL (OR, 5.53; 95% CI, 1.83-16.73; P = .002) had a higher OR for MI vs those in the three lower risk quartiles combined., Conclusion: Independent of plasma HDL cholesterol levels, 2 of 3 antiatherogenic HDL functionalities tested were significantly impaired in STEMI patients, namely cholesterol efflux and anti-inflammatory properties. Increased myeloperoxidase levels might represent a major contributing mechanism for decreased HDL functionality in MI patients., (Copyright © 2016 National Lipid Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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11. Routine tests and automated urinalysis in patients with suspected urinary tract infection at the ED.
- Author
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Middelkoop SJ, van Pelt LJ, Kampinga GA, Ter Maaten JC, and Stegeman CA
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, ROC Curve, Urinalysis methods, Urinary Tract Infections diagnosis, Diagnostic Tests, Routine methods, Emergency Service, Hospital, Urinary Tract Infections urine
- Abstract
Background: Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are frequently encountered. Diagnostics of UTI (urine dipstick, Gram stain, urine culture) lack proven accuracy and precision in the emergency department. Utility of automated urinalysis shows promise for UTI diagnosis but has not been validated., Methods: A total of 381 cases presenting with fever and/or clinically suspected UTI were analyzed. Diagnosis was based on clinical presentation, urine culture and/ or blood culture, and successful treatment. Performance of standard diagnostics and automated urinalysis (Sysmex UF-1000i) was analyzed at various cutoff values, and diagnostic algorithms were tested., Results: One hundred forty-three (37.5%) cases were diagnosed with UTI. Sensitivity of urine dipstick nitrite was 32.9% and specificity was 93.7%. Sensitivity of urine dipstick leukocyte esterase (3+) was 80.4% and specificity was 82.8%. Receiver operating characteristic curves of automated bacterial and leukocyte count showed area under the curve of 0.851 and 0.872, respectively. Cutoff values of 133 bacteria/μL and 48 leukocytes/μL resulted in >90% sensitivity. Diagnostic values for complicated cases (antibiotics, catheters) were inferior to uncomplicated cases. Algorithms combining dipstick and automated counts did not improve accuracy with the exception of a 5.2% increase in uncomplicated cases (n=247)., Conclusions: Automated leukocyte and bacterial count can be used in the emergency department setting with comparable accuracy compared with standard dipstick analysis with minor improvement when combined., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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