Serum Ferritin Identifies Septic Patients with Macrophage Activation-like Syndrome
bmcmedicine.biomedcentral.comA serum ferritin level above 4420 ng/ml identifies in a reliable and very specific way the septic patient with macrophage activation-like syndrome (MALS).
Since the recent subgroup analysis indicated a survival benefit from anakinra treatment among patients with MALS, it is plausible that the use of ferritin can identify potential candidates for such a personalized immunotherapy approach in sepsis.
The frequency of MALS was 3.7% and 4.3% in the test and the validation cohort, respectively. In both cohorts, MALS was an independent risk factor for 10-day mortality.
A ferritin level above 4420 ng/ml was accompanied by 66.7% and 66% mortality after 28 days, respectively.
Patients with infections and systemic inflammatory response syndrome were assigned to one test cohort (nā=ā3417) and a validation cohort (nā=ā1704).
MALS was diagnosed for patients scoring positive either for the hemophagocytic syndrome score and/or having both hepatobiliary dysfunction and disseminated intravascular coagulation.