AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates sclerostin (SOST) as a potential biomarker for sepsis management, particularly in predicting patient outcomes.
  • SOST levels were measured in 73 elderly septic patients, with findings indicating that higher SOST levels are linked to increased 30-day mortality risk and are more predictive than traditional scoring systems.
  • Over a median follow-up of 2.5 years, SOST showed a significant decline in levels, and this change further correlated with long-term mortality, suggesting its importance in assessing both short- and long-term health outcomes in septic patients.

Article Abstract

Unmet needs challenge clinical management of sepsis especially concerning patient profiling, enhancing recovery, and long-term sequelae. Here, we preliminarily focused on sclerostin (SOST) as a candidate biomarker to encompass such a broad range of clinical needs related to sepsis. Seventy-three septic patients were enrolled at internal medicine wards between January 2017 and December 2019 in this pilot study. Clinical examination and blood sample analyses were collected at enrollment and after 7 and 14 days. SOST levels were assessed on serum by ELISA. Thirty-day mortality was set as primary outcome. In-hospital and long-term mortality (2.5 years of median follow-up) were assessed as secondary outcomes. Patients were frail, elderly, and heterogeneous in terms of comorbidity burden. SOST levels were associated with age, cardiovascular comorbidities, and time to early death (30 days). When regression models were built, SOST displayed a high predictive value toward 30-day mortality (OR 13.459 with 95% CI 1.226-148.017) with ever better performance than validated scoring scales for critical ill patients. Such a predictive value of SOST was further confirmed for in-hospital (HR 10.089 with 95% CI 1.375-74.013) and long-term mortality (HR 5.061 with 95% CI 1.379-18.570). SOST levels generally decreased over 7 to 14 days after enrollment (p for trend < 0.001). The degree of this variation further predicted long-term mortality (HR for Δ SOST T0-day 14: 1.006 with 95% CI 1.001-1.011). Our results suggest a role for SOST in both short- and long-time prediction of worse outcome in septic elderly admitted to internal medicine wards.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10412666PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11739-023-03223-wDOI Listing

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