Understanding the Inflammatory Cytokine Response in Pneumonia and Sepsis
Abstract
Severe sepsis is common and frequently fatal, and community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is the leading cause. Although severe sepsis is often attributed to uncontrolled and unbalanced inflammation, evidence from humans with infection syndromes across the breadth of disease is lacking. In this study we describe the systemic cytokine response to pneumonia and determine if specific patterns, including the balance of proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory markers, are associated with severe sepsis and death.
This is a cohort study of 1886 subjects hospitalized with CAP through the emergency departments in 28 US academic and community hospitals. We defined severe sepsis as CAP complicated by new-onset organ dysfunction, following international consensus conference criteria. We measured plasma tumor necrosis factor, IL-6 (interleukin 6), and IL-10 levels daily for the first week and weekly thereafter. Our main outcome measures were severe sepsis and 90-day mortality.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 20.62
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 63
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Sepsis
- Medicine
- Proinflammatory cytokine
- Pneumonia
- Cytokine
- Immunology
- Community-acquired pneumonia
- Cytokine storm
- Good health and well-being