Sepsis Clinical Trial
Nowadays, a physician plays a more important role in managing patients with potential
infectious complications in the emergency room. Previous studies demonstrated the importance
of early and adequate anti-microbial therapy in reducing the mortality and morbidity of
patients with severe sepsis. However, in one study, about 6% of clinically significant
bacteremic patients were misdiagnosed and discharged from the emergency room. In other
studies, about 8.5 to approximately 17% of empirical antibiotic selection was judged
inappropriately according to subsequent microbiology, and anti-microbial susceptibility was
a result. It reflects the diversity in the presentations of infectious diseases and limited
available microbiological reports from the first-line emergency physicians. Timely diagnosis
and selection of appropriate antibiotics/treatment in treating those patients challenge an
emergency physician more than ever before.
A serum marker, procalcitonin, was recently demonstrated to be a potential indicator in
distinguishing between non-infectious and infectious acute inflammatory reactions, viral and
bacterial infections, and non-bacteremic and bacteremic infections. It also demonstrates the
association with high-mortality risk in patients with severe sepsis. However, some areas
remain inconclusive in the clinical application of this potential serum marker.
The investigators designed this prospective study with the following purposes:
1. To clarify the sensitivity and specificity of the serum procalcitonin quantitative test
as a clinical indicator of sepsis;
2. To identify the cut-off value of the serum procalcitonin level in sepsis screening
among various groups of patients with different co-morbidities;
3. To test the potential role of the procalcitonin quantitative test in identifying occult
sepsis in patients with an acute undifferentiated febrile reaction in the emergency
room;
4. To test the possibility of the sequential procalcitonin quantitative test as a
serological guide of the appropriateness of an empirical antibiotic before the
microbiology results are available.
Conclusions in the investigators' study will clarify the clinical application of the serum
procalcitonin quantitative test in the differential diagnosis of patients with systemic
inflammatory reaction syndrome, the screening of high-risk sepsis patients, and the
effectiveness of an empirical antibiotic evaluation.
n/a
Observational Model: Defined Population, Primary Purpose: Screening, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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