
Sepsis in AIDS patients: clinical, etiological and inflammatory characteristics
Author(s) -
Silva João Manoel,
Santos Sigrid De Sousa
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of the international aids society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.724
H-Index - 62
ISSN - 1758-2652
DOI - 10.7448/ias.16.1.17344
Subject(s) - medicine , procalcitonin , septic shock , sepsis , intensive care unit , etiology , gastroenterology , prospective cohort study , immunology
Intensive care mortality of HIV‐positive patients has progressively decreased. However, critically ill HIV‐positive patients with sepsis present a worse prognosis. To better understand this condition, we propose a study comparing clinical, etiological and inflammatory data, and the hospital course of HIV‐positive and HIV‐negative patients with severe sepsis or septic shock. Methods A prospective observational study enrolling patients with severe sepsis or septic shock associated or not with HIV infection, and admitted to intensive care unit (ICU). Clinical, microbiological and inflammatory parameters were assessed, including C‐reactive protein (CRP), procalcitonin (PCT), interleukin‐6, interleukin‐10 and TNF‐α. Outcome measures were in‐hospital and six‐month mortality. Results The study included 58 patients with severe sepsis/septic shock admitted to ICU, 36 HIV‐positive and 22 HIV‐negative. All HIV‐positive patients met the criteria for AIDS (CDC/2008). The main foci of infection in HIV‐positive patients were pulmonary and abdominal ( p =0.001). Fungi and mycobacteria were identified in 44.4% and 16.7% of HIV‐positive patients, respectively. In contrast, the main etiologies for sepsis in HIV‐negative patients were Gram‐negative bacilli (36.4%) and Gram‐positive cocci (36.4%) ( p =0.001). CRP and PCT admission concentrations were lower in HIV‐positive patients (130 vs. 168 mg/dL p =0.005, and 1.19 vs. 4.06 ng/mL p =0.04, respectively), with a progressive decrease in surviving patients. Initial IL‐10 concentrations were higher in HIV‐positive patients (4.4 pg/mL vs. 1.0 pg/mL, p =0.005), with moderate accuracy for predicting death (area under receiver‐operating characteristic curve =0.74). In‐hospital and six‐month mortality were higher in HIV‐positive patients (55.6 vs. 27.3% p =0.03, and 58.3 vs. 27.3% p =0.02, respectively). Conclusions The course of sepsis was more severe in HIV‐positive patients, with distinct clinical, etiological and inflammatory characteristics.