1. SAA (Serum Amyloid A): A Novel Predictor of Stroke-Associated Infections
- Author
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Vanessa Lapierre-Fétaud, Júlia Faura, Natalie Scherrer, Andreas R. Luft, Juliane Schweizer, Mira Katan, Sandra Boned, Valerie Schütz, Leire Azurmendi Gil, Joan Montaner, Felix Fluri, Alejandro Bustamante, Jean-Charles Sanchez, University of Zurich, and Bustamante, Alejandro
- Subjects
Male ,2902 Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,610 Medicine & health ,2705 Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Leukocyte Count ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Clinical Decision Rules ,Sepsis ,Humans ,Medicine ,Serum amyloid A ,Stroke ,Serum Amyloid A Protein ,Aged ,Ischemic Stroke ,030304 developmental biology ,Aged, 80 and over ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Cross Infection ,0303 health sciences ,business.industry ,Healthcare-Associated Pneumonia ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,10040 Clinic for Neurology ,SAA - Serum amyloid A ,C-Reactive Protein ,Logistic Models ,2728 Neurology (clinical) ,ROC Curve ,Area Under Curve ,Urinary Tract Infections ,Immunology ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Deglutition Disorders ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Procalcitonin ,Biomarkers ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background and Purpose: The aim of this study was to evaluate and independently validate SAA (serum amyloid A)—a recently discovered blood biomarker—to predict poststroke infections. Methods: The derivation cohort (A) was composed of 283 acute ischemic stroke patients and the independent validation cohort (B), of 367 patients. The primary outcome measure was any stroke-associated infection, defined by the criteria of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, occurring during hospitalization. To determine the association of SAA levels on admission with the development of infections, logistic regression models were calculated. The discriminatory ability of SAA was assessed, by calculating the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve. Results: After adjusting for all predictors that were significantly associated with any infection in the univariate analysis, SAA remained an independent predictor in study A (adjusted odds ratio, 1.44 [95% CI, 1.16–1.79]; P =0.001) and in study B (adjusted odds ratio, 1.52 [1.05–2.22]; P =0.028). Adding SAA to the best regression model without the biomarker, the discriminatory accuracy improved from 0.76 (0.69–0.83) to 0.79 (0.72–0.86; P P Conclusions: Among patients with ischemic stroke, blood SAA measured on admission is a novel independent predictor of infection after stroke. SAA improved the discrimination between patients who developed an infection compared with those who did not in both derivation and validation cohorts. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov . Unique identifier: NCT00390962.
- Published
- 2020
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