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Risk-stratification of febrile African children at risk of sepsis using sTREM-1 as basis for a rapid triage test

Risk-stratification of febrile African children at risk of sepsis using sTREM-1 as basis for a rapid triage test

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dc.contributor.author Aleksandra Leligdowicz
dc.contributor.author Andrea Conroy
dc.contributor.author Michael Hawkes
dc.contributor.author Melissa Richard-Grennblatt
dc.contributor.author Kathleen Zhong
dc.contributor.author Robert Opoka
dc.contributor.author Sophie Namasopo
dc.contributor.author David Bell
dc.contributor.author W Liles
dc.contributor.author Bruno da Costa
dc.contributor.author Peter Jüni
dc.contributor.author Kevin Kain
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-11T13:51:52Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-11T13:51:52Z
dc.date.issued 2020
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/49665
dc.description.abstract Abstract; Identifying febrile children at risk of sepsis in low-resource settings can improve survival, but recognition triage tools are lacking. Here we test the hypothesis that measuring circulating markers of immune and endothelial activation may identify children at risk of sepsis due to all causes. In a prospective cohort study of 2,502 children in Uganda, we show that Soluble Triggering Receptor Expressed on Myeloid cells-1 (sTREM-1) measured at first clinical presentation, had high predictive accuracy for subsequent in-hospital mortality. sTREM-1 had the best performance, versus 10 other markers, with an AUROC for discriminating children at risk of death of 0.893 in derivation (95% CI 0.843-0.944) and 0.901 in external validation (95% CI 0.856-0.947). sTREM-1 cutoffs corresponding to a negative likelihood ratio (LR) of 0.10 and a positive LR of 10 classified children into low (1306 children, 53.1%), intermediate (942, 38.3%) and high (212, 8.6%) risk zones. The estimated incidence of death was 0.3%, 3.6%, and 31.0%, respectively, suggesting sTREM-1 could be used to risk-stratify febrile children. These findings support sTREM-1 as the basis for rapid triage test for all cause fever syndromes in children in low-resource settings.
dc.publisher Research Square
dc.title Risk-stratification of febrile African children at risk of sepsis using sTREM-1 as basis for a rapid triage test
dc.type Preprint
dc.identifier.doi 10.21203/rs.3.rs-65068/v1
dc.identifier.lens 093-311-265-098-632


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