Of the 598 patients enrolled, 573 developed suspected
bloodstream infection and 434 (72.6%) had blood cultures sent 24 h after ICU admission; 142 were excluded due to positive cultures from other sites. Of the remaining 292 patients, 31 (10.7%) grew
coagulase-negative Staphylococcus, 59 (20.2%) grew known pathogenic organisms and 202 (69.2%) did not grow any organisms in their blood cultures. Twenty-five patients without suspicion of
infection served as the control group.
Interleukin (IL)-6,
procalcitonin (PCT) and
C-reactive protein (CRP) levels were highest among the known pathogen group (IL-6 271.8 U/L, PCT 4.6 U/L and CRP 164 mg/L), were similar between the
coagulase-negative Staphylococcus and negative culture groups (IL-6 67.0 U/L versus 61.4 U/L [P=1.00]; PCT 1.0 U/L versus 0.9 U/L [P=0.80]; and CRP 110 mg/L versus 103 mg/L [P=0.75]), and were lowest in the control group (IL-6 31.0 U/L, PCT 0.2 U/L and CRP 41.0 mg/L). In the
coagulase-negative Staphylococcus group, patients who died by day 28 had increased inflammatory bio-marker levels compared with survivors, although the differences were not statistically significant.
CONCLUSIONS: