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Plasma procalcitonin may be an early predictor of liver injury in acetaminophen poisoning: A prospective cohort study
Author(s) -
Nuzzo Alexandre,
Salem Shireen,
Malissin Isabelle,
Diallo Abdourahmane,
Deye Nicolas,
Goury Antoine,
Gourlain Hervé,
Péron Nicolas,
Vicaut Eric,
Voicu Sebastian,
Mégarbane Bruno
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
ueg journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.667
H-Index - 35
eISSN - 2050-6414
pISSN - 2050-6406
DOI - 10.1002/ueg2.12093
Subject(s) - medicine , acetaminophen , liver injury , procalcitonin , hazard ratio , gastroenterology , prospective cohort study , confidence interval , nomogram , cohort , area under the curve , anesthesia , sepsis
Background and Aims Acetaminophen is a common cause of poisoning and liver injury worldwide; however, patient stratification is suboptimal. We aimed to assess the contribution of admission plasma procalcitonin concentration (PCT) to better identify acetaminophen‐poisoned patients likely to develop liver injury. Methods We conducted a prospective observational cohort study including all acetaminophen‐poisoned patients requiring N‐acetylcysteine admitted in a toxicological intensive care unit between 2012 and 2017. Multivariate analysis was performed using a Cox regression model to investigate factors associated with liver injury, defined as an increase in alanine aminotransferase (ALT) >100 IU/L. Results One hundred seventeen patients (age, 32 years (21–53), median [25th–75th percentiles]) were included after self‐ingesting 16 g (9–30) acetaminophen and received N‐acetylcysteine infusion administered within a median 6 h‐delay (4–12) from exposure. Co‐ingestions were reported in 77% of patients. Rumack–Matthew nomogram was non‐interpretable in 47% cases. Liver injury occurred in 38 patients (32%) with a median peak ALT of 2020 IU/L (577–4248). In liver injury patients, admission PCT was significantly increased in comparison to patients without liver injury (21.5 ng/ml (3.2–44.9) versus 0.1 ng/ml (0–0.4), respectively, p  < 0.01). The increase in PCT preceded the increase in ALT by 33 h (10–74). In a multivariate analysis, PCT > 1 ng/ml was significantly associated with liver injury (hazard ratio, 7.2 [95% confidence interval, 2.3–22.6; p  < 0.001]). PCT (area under the receiver‐operating characteristics curve, 0.91 [95%CI: 0.84–0.97]) predicted liver injury with sensitivity, specificity, negative, and positive predictive values of 0.92, 0.84, 0.96, and 0.73, respectively. Conclusion PCT on admission is associated with liver injury in acetaminophen poisoning. PCT might be used as a predictive tool of liver injury to improve clinical decision‐making.

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