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ObjectivesPlasma ferritin levels above 4,420 ng/mL have been proposed as a diagnostic marker for macrophage activation-like syndrome in sepsis and used for selection of sepsis patients for anti-inflammatory therapy. We here sought to determine the frequency, presentation, outcome, and host response aberrations of macrophage activation-like syndrome, as defined by admission ferritin levels above 4,420 ng/mL, in critically ill patients with community-acquired pneumonia.DesignA prospective observational cohort study.SettingICUs in two tertiary hospitals in the Netherlands.PatientsOne hundred fifty-three patients admitted with community-acquired pneumonia.Measurements and main resultsPatients were stratified in community-acquired pneumonia-macrophage activation-like syndrome (n = 15; 9.8%) and community-acquired pneumonia-control groups (n = 138; 90.2%) based on an admission plasma ferritin level above or below 4,420 ng/mL, respectively. Community-acquired pneumonia-macrophage activation-like syndrome patients presented with a higher disease severity and had a higher ICU mortality (46.7% vs 12.3% in community-acquired pneumonia-controls; p = 0.002). Twenty-three plasma biomarkers indicative of dysregulation of key host response pathways implicated in sepsis pathogenesis (systemic inflammation, cytokine responses, endothelial cell activation, and barrier function, coagulation activation) were more disturbed in community-acquired pneumonia-macrophage activation-like syndrome patients. Hematologic malignancies were overrepresented in community-acquired pneumonia-macrophage activation-like syndrome patients (33.3% vs 5.1% in community-acquired pneumonia-controls; p = 0.001). In a subgroup analysis excluding patients with hematologic malignancies (n = 141), differences in mortality were not present anymore, but the exaggerated host response abnormalities in community-acquired pneumonia-macrophage activation-like syndrome patients remained.ConclusionsMacrophage activation-like syndrome in critically ill patients with community-acquired pneumonia occurs more often in patients with hematologic malignancies and is associated with deregulation of multiple host response pathways.

Original publication

DOI

10.1097/ccm.0000000000005072

Type

Journal

Critical care medicine

Publication Date

11/2021

Volume

49

Pages

1901 - 1911

Addresses

Center for Experimental and Molecular Medicine (CEMM), Amsterdam University Medical Centers - Location AMC, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Keywords

MARS Consortium, Humans, Pneumonia, Bacterial, Community-Acquired Infections, Critical Illness, Severity of Illness Index, Cohort Studies, Prospective Studies, Macrophage Activation, Aged, Middle Aged, Intensive Care Units, Netherlands, Male, Ferritins, Biomarkers