Clinical value of determining heparin-binding protein of cerebrospinal fluid in children with purulent meningitis
10.3760/cma.j.issn.1009-9158.2019.11.011
- VernacularTitle: 脑脊液肝素结合蛋白检测在小儿化脓性脑膜炎中的应用价值
- Author:
Caizhi HUANG
1
;
Jie ZHANG
;
Liya MO
Author Information
1. Center of Clinical Laboratory Medicine, Hunan Children′s Hospital, Changsha 410007, China
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
Heparin-binding protein;
Antimicrobial cationic peptides;
Purulent meningitis;
Cerebrospinal fluid;
Child
- From:
Chinese Journal of Laboratory Medicine
2019;42(11):955-961
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To explore the clinical value of determining heparin-binding protein(HBP) of cerebrospinal fluid(CSF) in the diagnosis and prognostic prediction in children with purulent meningitis(PM).
Methods:76 children with PM, 55 children with viral encephalitis(VE) and 40 control children with non-infectious diseases, all admitted to Hunan Children′ Hospital from August 2018 to January 2019, were enrolled in this retrospective study. Children with PM were divided into favorable prognosis group and poor prognosis group according to the Glasgow Outcome Scale on discharge. CSF HBP, white blood cell count(WBC), percentage of neutrophilic granulocyte(N%), glucose(Glu), total protein(TP), lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) and serum procalcitonin(PCT) were analyzed on the first day of admission(DAY1) in PM group, VE group and control group, and on the seventh day of admission(DAY7) in PM group. Nonparametric tests were used to detect the differences of the laboratory indexes and Spearman rank correlation test was utilized to analyze the correlation between HBP and other markers. Receiver operating characteristic curves (ROC curves) were established to evaluate the values of the detection indexes in the diagnosis and prognosis of PM.
Results:The differences of CSF HBP[63.09(18.10-272.19)ng/mL, 5.90(5.90-6.40)ng/mL and 5.90(5.90-5.90)ng/mL], WBC[365.00(20.00-1285.00)×106/L, 21.00(8.00-30.00)×106/L and 13.50(7.25-21.00)×106/L], N%[0.65(0.50-0.79), 0.19(0.10-0.25) and 0.21(0.15-0.27)], Glu[1.97(1.07-3.08)mmol/L, 2.89(2.66-3.42)mmol/L and 3.04(2.68-3.42)mmol/L], TP[1.43(0.63-1.88)g/L, 0.23(0.16-0.32)g/L and 0.13(0.10-0.31)g/L], LDH[152.00(46.50-461.50)IU/L, 16.00(13.20-22.00)IU/L and 16.00(10.25-19.75) IU/L] and serum PCT[1.35(0.19-9.33)ng/mL, 0.06(0.03-0.11)ng/mL and 0.08(0.05-0.14)ng/mL] levels on DAY1 were statistically significant among PM group, VE group and control group(HHBP=138.62, HWBC=69.72, HN%=106.67, HGlu=34.08, HTP=68.00, HLDH=85.11, HPCT=79.20, P<0.001). HBP had the largest area under curve(AUC=0.997) for the diagnosis of PM, and had excellent sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value (98.70%, 97.90%, 97.40%, 98.94%, respectively) at the optimal cut-off value (11.84 ng/mL). Compared with DAY1,CSF HBP, WBC, N%, TP, LDH and serum PCT levels on DAY7 were statistically lower in favorable prognosis group(P<0.05). The differences for all the indexes between DAY1 and DAY7 in poor prognosis group were not statistically significant, however. It was not significant for all the indexes on DAY1 to predict poor prognosis(P>0.05). But the indexes on DAY7 for predicting poor prognosis were significant (P<0.05) and HBP still had the largest AUC (0.976) for predicting the poor prognosis with good sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value (100.0%, 93.8%, 76.3%, 100.0%, respectively) at the optimal cut-off value(128.84 ng/mL). CSF HBP was positively correlated to CSF WBC, N%, TP, LDH, serum PCT level(rWBC=0.670, rN%=0.802, rTP=0.562, rLDH=0.524, rPCT=0.436, P<0.001) and negatively correlated to CSF Glu level(r=-0.469, P<0.001).
Conclusions:CSF HBP is valuable in the diagnosis and prognostic prediction in children with purulent meningitis.