This article is part of the supplement: 30th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine
CD64, a marker of leucocyte activation kinetics after uncomplicated cardiac surgery
Critical Care 2010, 14(Suppl 1):P16 doi:10.1186/cc8248
The electronic version of this article is the complete one and can be found online at: http://ccforum.com/content/14/S1/P16
| Published: | 1 March 2010 |
© 2010 BioMed Central Ltd.
Introduction
The aim of this study was to assess the CD64 kinetics after normal cardiac surgery, an essential step to define the potential use of CD64 as an early and specific infectious marker in this postoperative setting. CD64 is a high-affinity receptor for the Fc portion of IgG. It is weakly expressed on the polynuclear neutrophils (PMNs) at rest [1,2] but increases specifically after bacterial stimulation. Thus, CD64 analysis is proposed as an early infectious marker.
Methods
Prospective study realised in the medico-surgical ICU of CHU Charleroi (Belgium). Twenty-two patients (mean age 64 ± 13 years) scheduled for cardiac surgery were included in the analysis. The CD64 expression on neutrophils was quantified by the haematologic cell dyn sapphire method (Abott, USA). C-reactive protein, leukocyte count, white blood cells, platelets and temperature were also monitored. Values are expressed as median (25th to 75th) percentile.
Results
CD64 index (Figure 1) slightly rose from the day 0, median value 0.86 units (1.06 to 1.38 units) to day 5 after the surgery, 1.01 (1.32 to 1.68 units). However, this increase was moderate, and the median values did not exceed the usual threshold of 1.5 units. Conversely, CRP showed a large increase from normal values on day 0 to 8, 67 mg/dl (6.64 to 13.56 mg/dl) on day 5. No significant correlation (P > 0.05) was found between CD64 and the others parameters of inflammation (CRP, leukocyte count, PMNs, platelets and temperature).
Conclusions
Our results show that the neutrophil CD64 expression after cardiac surgery with ECC is only moderately increased. The role of this new biomarker in the early diagnosis of infection (after major surgery) should be assessed in prospective studies.
References
-
Loan-Facsinay A, de Kimpe SJ, Hellwig SMM, et al.: FcγRI(CD64) contributes substantially to severities of arthritis, hypersensitivity responses, and protection from bacterial infection.
Immunity 2002, 16:391-402. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text
-
Harpaz Y, Chothia C: Many of the immunoglobulin superfamily domains in cell adhesion molecules and surface receptors belong to a new structural set which is close to that containing variable domains.
J Mol Biol 1994, 238:528-539. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text
Figure 1.