Critical Care

official impact factor 4.60

Commentary

Urine sTREM-1 assessment in diagnosing sepsis and sepsis-related acute kidney injury

Marc Derive and Sébastien Gibot*

Author Affiliations

Service de Réanimation Médicale, Hopital Central, 54035 Nancy Cedex, France

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Critical Care 2011, 15:1013 doi:10.1186/cc10533


See related research by Su et al., http://ccforum.com/content/15/5/R250

Published: 30 November 2011

Abstract

The triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-1 (TREM-1) is an immunoreceptor whose role is to amplify the inflammatory response mediated by the engagement of Toll-like and NOD-like receptors. As the expression of TREM-1 is believed to be upregulated during infection, this protein has been studied as a sepsis biomarker. In the previous issue of Critical Care, Su and colleagues reported on the usefulness of urinary soluble TREM-1 in diagnosing sepsis and assessingits severity. Importantly, the authors describe, for the first time, that urinary soluble TREM-1 measurement is able to predict the development of sepsis-associated acute kidney injury (AKI). If these results were to be confirmed by larger studies, urinary soluble TREM-1 would possibly become a new biomarker for sepsis-associated AKI.