Journal of Clinical Medicine (Nov 2020)

Procalcitonin to Reduce Antibiotic Exposure during Acute Chest Syndrome in Adult Patients with Sickle-Cell Disease

  • Keyvan Razazi,
  • Ségolène Gendreau,
  • Elise Cuquemelle,
  • Mehdi Khellaf,
  • Constance Guillaud,
  • Bertrand Godeau,
  • Giovanna Melica,
  • Stéphane Moutereau,
  • Camille Gomart,
  • Slim Fourati,
  • Nicolas De Prost,
  • Guillaume Carteaux,
  • Christian Brun-Buisson,
  • Pablo Bartolucci,
  • Anoosha Habibi,
  • Armand Mekontso Dessap

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9113718
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. 3718

Abstract

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Acute chest syndrome (ACS) is a major complication of sickle-cell disease. Bacterial infection is one cause of ACS, so current guidelines recommend the routine use of antibiotics. We performed a prospective before–after study in medical wards and an intensive-care unit (ICU). During the control phase, clinicians were blinded to procalcitonin concentration results. We built an algorithm using the obtained measurements to hasten antibiotic cessation after three days of treatment if bacterial infection was not documented, and procalcitonin concentrations were all p = 0.001). More patients had a short (≤3 days) antibiotic course during intervention phase: 31% vs 9% (p = 0.01). There was neither infection relapse nor pulmonary superinfection in the entire cohort. A procalcitonin-guided strategy to prescribe antibiotics in patients with ACS may reduce antibiotic exposure with no apparent adverse outcomes.

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