Microorganisms (Jun 2022)

Distinguishing <i>Kingella kingae</i> from Pyogenic Acute Septic Arthritis in Young Portuguese Children

  • Catarina Gouveia,
  • Ana Subtil,
  • Susana Norte,
  • Joana Arcangelo,
  • Madalena Almeida Santos,
  • Rita Corte-Real,
  • Maria João Simões,
  • Helena Canhão,
  • Delfin Tavares

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms10061233
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6
p. 1233

Abstract

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(1) Background: We aim to identify clinical and laboratorial parameters to distinguish Kingella kingae from pyogenic septic arthritis (SA). (2) Methods: A longitudinal, observational, single-centre study of children Results: We found a total of 75 children, 44 with K. kingae and 31 with pyogenic infections (mostly MSSA, S. pneumoniae and S. pyogenes). K. kingae affected younger children with low or absent fever, low inflammatory markers and a favourable prognosis. In the univariate analyses, fever, septic look, CRP and ESR at admission and CRP at 48 h were significantly lower in K. kingae SA. In the multivariate analyses, age > 6 months ≤ 2 years, apyrexy and CRP ≤ 100 mg/L were significative, with an overall predictive positive value of 86.5%, and 88.4% for K. kingae. For this model, ROC curves were capable of differentiating (AUC 0.861, 95% CI 0.767–0.955) K. kingae SA from typical pathogens. (4) Conclusions: Age > 6 months ≤ 2 years, apyrexy and PCR ≤ 100 mg/L were the main predictive factors to distinguish K. kingae from pyogenic SA < 5 years. These data need to be validated in a larger study.

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