Review badges
0 pre-pub reviews
0 post-pub reviews
Abstract

Life expectancy of patients with liver cirrhosis is closely linked to the degree of liver dysfunction and the occurrence of bacterial infection. An early diagnosis of infection helps to initiate adequate and timely measures and improves outcome of cirrhotic patients. Endocan is a newly recognized biomarker of sepsis. However, there have been no studies of the trends in endocan levels in cirrhotic patients with bacterial infection and their associations with markers of infection and inflammation. This study sought to assess the diagnostic value of serum levels of endocan, procalcitonin (PCT), C-reactive protein (CRP), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), and interleukin-6 (IL-6) in 126 patients with cirrhosis: 51 with decompensated infected cirrhosis, 56 with decompensated uninfected and 19 with compensated uninfected cirrhosis at inclusion. We analyzed the association of endocan with clinical factors in cirrhosis by comparison with indicators of infection and inflammation. Endocan, PCT, CRP, IL-6 and TNF-alpha were assayed in serum samples by ELISA analyses. Serum levels of endocan, PCT, CRP and TNF-alpha were significantly higher in cirrhotic patients with clinically overt infections. Endocan levels were correlated to neither PCT levels nor IL-6 levels in each group of patients with cirrhosis. CRP and TNF-alpha levels and Child-Pugh score correlated only in the infected group of patients with endocan levels, while in the uninfected groups of cirrhotic patients no significant correlation could be detected. The diagnostic accuracy of endocan increased in advanced stage of the disease. Serum endocan levels ≥ 2.05 ng/ml had a sensitivity of 76.1% and specificity of 85% for the diagnosis bacterial infection in decompensated cirrhotic patients. The endocan measured at admission is a good clinical parameter predicting the occurrence of infection in these patients. Elevated endocan may reflect the degree of endothelial cell injury induced by a systemic inflammatory response, a pathologic process that could modify the course of advanced cirrhosis.

Authors

Zuwala-Jagiello, J;  Simon, K;  Kukla, M;  Murawska-Cialowicz, E;  Gorka-Dynysiewicz, J;  Grzebyk, E;  Pazgan-Simon, M

Publons users who've claimed - I am an author

No Publons users have claimed this paper.