Zivkovic_2018_Mediators.Inflamm_2018_1942193

Reference

Title : A Sustained Reduction in Serum Cholinesterase Enzyme Activity Predicts Patient Outcome following Sepsis - Zivkovic_2018_Mediators.Inflamm_2018_1942193
Author(s) : Zivkovic AR , Decker SO , Zirnstein AC , Sigl A , Schmidt K , Weigand MA , Hofer S , Brenner T
Ref : Mediators Inflamm , 2018 :1942193 , 2018
Abstract :

Early sepsis identification is of paramount importance for an effective therapy and the patient outcome; however, a suitable prognostic biomarker is lacking. Anti-inflammatory nonneuronal cholinergic signaling modulates the magnitude of an immune response. Serum cholinesterase (BChE), an enzyme that hydrolyzes acetylcholine, plays an important role during inflammatory response and serves as an accurate index of cholinergic activity. BChE activity was measured in septic patients using a point-of-care system, and levels of conventional inflammatory markers and the disease severity scores were obtained. We observed a strong, sustained reduction in BChE activity in patients who died within a 90-day observation period, as compared to survivors. Reduced BChE activity when measured at the ICU admission effectively differentiated between the 90-day survivor and the nonsurvivor patient groups. We estimated a critical BChE level of 1.661 kU/L (CI 0.5-0.8, 94% sensitivity, 48% specificity, AUC 0.7) to best predict patient outcome providing a benchmark criterion for early detection of potentially fatal sepsis measured at the admission. This finding suggests that the BChE activity, used in combination with the laboratory tests, clinical examination, and the disease severity scoring, could serve to identify high-risk patients at the ICU admission, the most critical time point in the sepsis treatment.

PubMedSearch : Zivkovic_2018_Mediators.Inflamm_2018_1942193
PubMedID: 29853783

Related information

Citations formats

Zivkovic AR, Decker SO, Zirnstein AC, Sigl A, Schmidt K, Weigand MA, Hofer S, Brenner T (2018)
A Sustained Reduction in Serum Cholinesterase Enzyme Activity Predicts Patient Outcome following Sepsis
Mediators Inflamm 2018 :1942193

Zivkovic AR, Decker SO, Zirnstein AC, Sigl A, Schmidt K, Weigand MA, Hofer S, Brenner T (2018)
Mediators Inflamm 2018 :1942193