Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the impact of serum procalcitonin (PCT) testing on use of antibiotics and patient outcome.
Design: A retrospective chart review evaluation of the patients who had a serum procalcitonin test performed at one medical center.
Setting: One academic medical center, Mount Sinai Medical Center, Miami Beach.
Participants: One hundred and forty four consecutive patients who had procalcitonin determined beginning in January 2014.
Measurements: We analyzed patient age, mortality, length of stay in intensive care unit and total hospital stay, presence of positive blood culture, and if on antibiotics at forty- eight and one hundred and twenty hours after PCT determination.
Results: There were seventy two patients with a positive PCT determination (>0.5 ng/ml) and seventy two patients with negative PCT (<0.5 ng/ml). Patients with a positive serum PCT had a longer hospital length of stay, longer length of stay in Intensive Care Unit (ICU), were more likely to have a positive blood culture, more likely to be on antibiotics at 120 hours after PCT, and had higher mortality, (p<.05).
Conclusion: Serum PCT level appears to predict severity of illness, mortality, and continued use of antibiotics. Negative PCT did not predict stopping of antibiotic treatment at forty-eight hours after the test.
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