Cancer Medicine (Apr 2023)

Procalcitonin as a biomarker for predicting bacterial infection in chimeric antigen receptor T‐cell therapy recipients

  • Marissa Z. Powell,
  • Kristin C. Mara,
  • Radhika Bansal,
  • Matthew A. Hathcock,
  • Arushi Khurana,
  • N. Nora Bennani,
  • Yucai Wang,
  • Jonas Paludo,
  • Jose Villasboas Bisneto,
  • Stephen M. Ansell,
  • Patrick B. Johnston,
  • Yi Lin,
  • Jason N. Barreto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.5665
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8
pp. 9228 – 9235

Abstract

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Abstract Background It is unknown whether serum procalcitonin (PCT) concentration monitoring can differentiate between bacterial infection or cytokine release syndrome (CRS) when chimeric antigen receptor T‐cell (CAR‐T) recipients present with a constellation of signs and symptoms that may represent both complications. Objective The objective of the study was to assess the utility of serum PCT concentrations as a biomarker of bacterial infection in CAR‐T recipients. Study design This single‐center, retrospective, medical record review evaluated patients prescribed CAR‐T therapy until death or 30 days after infusion. Logistic regression modeling determined the association between elevated serum PCT concentrations within 48 h of fever onset and microbiologically confirmed infection. Secondary outcomes included clinically suspected infection, CAR‐T toxicity rates, and broad‐spectrum antibiotic usage. Predictive performance of PCT was assessed by area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC). Results The 98 included patients were a median age of 63 (IQR: 55–69) years old, 47 (48%) were male, and 87 (89%) were Caucasian. Baseline demographics and clinical characteristics were similar between patients with and without a bacterial infection. Serum PCT >0.4 ng/mL within 48 h of fever was significantly associated with a microbiologically confirmed bacterial infection (OR: 2.75 [95% CI: 1.02–7.39], p = 0.045). Median PCT values in patients with and without confirmed infections were 0.40 ng/mL (IQR: 0.26, 0.74) and 0.26 ng/mL (IQR: 0.13, 0.47), respectively. The AUC for PCT to predict bacterial infection was 0.62 (95% CI 0.48–0.76). All patients experienced CRS of some grade, with no difference in CRS severity based on elevated PCT. Broad‐spectrum antibiotics were used for a median of 45% and 23% of days in those with and without confirmed infection, respectively (p = 0.075). Conclusion Elevated serum PCT concentrations above 0.4 ng/mL at time of first fever after CAR‐T infusion was significantly associated with confirmed bacterial infection. Furthermore, rigorous, prospective studies should validate our findings and evaluate serial PCT measurements to optimize antimicrobial use after CAR‐T therapy.

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