Summary:
Objective: To establish the predictive value of monocyte activation during the initial ICU days on the ICU
survival of patients requiring long-term intensive care.
Design: Prospective, clinical study.
Setting: Department Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, St. Anna University Hospital, Brno, Czech Republic.
Materiál and methods:The immune profile was taken in patients estimated to stay in the ICU > 3 days in 5-
-day intervals. In this páper we report on activation of monocytes (Dr locus expression i.e. CD14+HLA-DR+)
determined by flow-cytometry during the first 5 days of ICU stay. We study the relation of CD14+HLA-DR+
to ICU survival, type of admission (surgical, medical, trauma, CPR) and APACHE II.
Results: 147 patients were studied [M/F 106/41; mean age 63 (54; 73) years]. 123 survived their ICU stay (S)
and 24 died (NS). APACHE II on admission was 27 (20; 32).
On day1 the CD14+HLA-DR+ was not different in S and NS [62% (45; 76) and 62.5% (42; 82) respectively; p
= 0.92] and its trend from day 1 to day 5 did not differ either [delta CD14+HLA-DR+ 18%(5; 32) and 5% (-23;
35)%, respectively; p = 0.19]. Surgical patients had significantly lower CD14+HLA-DR+ on admission compared to medical and CPR patients (p < 0.002 and p < 0.0002 respectively). No correlation was found between CD14+HLA-DR+ and APACHE II on admission (R = 0.015, p = 0.84).
Conclusion: Monocyte activation (CD14+HLA-DR+) on admission to ICU and its trend until ICU day 5 do
not predict ICU mortality in the heterogeneous population of long-term ICU patients.
Key words:
intensive - immunoparalysis - monocytes - APACHE II - outcome
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