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Journal Article

Citation

Albuali WH. Biomedicine (Taipei) 2023; 13(1): 39-45.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, EDP Sciences)

DOI

10.37796/2211-8039.1388

PMID

37168730

PMCID

PMC10166254

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although procalcitonin levels are raised in patients with systemic inflammation, its usage in pediatric patients, particularly those in the intensive care unit who are most susceptible to sepsis.

METHODS: It is a retrospective research study that included pediatric patients aged more than two weeks who were brought to the King Fahd Hospital of the University's PICU owing to serious trauma or post-acute postoperative occurrences from January 2017 to December 2019. At 24 h after admission, data such as age, gender, comorbidities, trauma severity as measured by the Injury Severity Score, and PRISM III score were collected.

RESULTS: Following a surgery abscess, there were a total of 39 (15.9%) deaths. Patients who died during their hospital stay had significantly higher mean levels of biomarkers such as PRISM III, PCT at 24 h, PCT 48-72 h, and PCT at day 5 (p = 0.001). The area under the ROC curve for PCT level 48/72 h was 0.89 (% CI: 0.85-0.93), p = 0.001, indicating that PCT had highly significant predictive validity in predicting in-hospital mortality at the best cutoff point of >1.35 with a high level of accuracy and precision of 82.1% and 82.0%, respectively.

CONCLUSION: The serum procalcitonin level (PTCL) can help predict the in-hospital prognosis of pediatrics that has had surgery. A combined control system is designed based on PTC expression for the examination of a patient receiving medication over a longer length of time.


Language: en

Keywords

Mortality; Pediatric intensive care unit; Procalcitonin; Ventilation

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