The role of C-reactive protein as a prognostic marker in COVID-19

Dominic Stringer(King's College London), Philip Braude(North Bristol NHS Trust), Phyo Kyaw Myint(University of Aberdeen), Louis Evans(Ysbyty Gwynedd Hospital NHS Trust), Jemima Collins(Ysbyty Ystrad Fawr), Alessia Verduri(Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria di Modena), Terry J Quinn(University of Glasgow), Arturo Vilches‐Moraga(Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust), Michael Stechman(University Hospital of Wales), Lyndsay Pearce(Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust), Susan Moug(Royal Alexandra Hospital), Kathryn McCarthy(North Bristol NHS Trust), Jonathan Hewitt(Aneurin Bevan University Health Board), Ben Carter(King's College London), COPE Study Collaborators(King's College London), Eilidh Bruce(King's College London), Alice Einarsson(King's College London), Aine McGovern, Carly Bisset, Ross Alexander(King's College London), Giovanni Guaraldi(King's College London), Caroline Murphy(King's College London), J. Daniel Kelly(King's College London), Tarik El Jichi Mutasem(King's College London), Sandeep Singh(King's College London), Dolcie Paxton(King's College London), Will Harris(King's College London), James Hesford(King's College London), M. Holloway(King's College London), Emma Mitchel(King's College London), Frances Rickard(King's College London), Norman Galbraith(King's College London), Emma Bhatti(King's College London), Jenny Edwards(King's College London), Siobhan Duffy(King's College London), Fenella Barlow-Pay(King's College London), Madeline Garcia(King's College London), Shefali Sangani(King's College London), Thomas Kneen(King's College London), Thomas Lee(King's College London), Angeline Price(King's College London), Charlotte Davey(King's College London), S Jones(King's College London), Kiah Lunstone(King's College London), A. J. M. Cavenagh(King's College London), Charlotte Silver(King's College London), Thomas Telford(King's College London), Rebecca K. Simmons
International Journal of Epidemiology
January 25, 2021
Cited by 201Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: C-reactive protein (CRP) is a non-specific acute phase reactant elevated in infection or inflammation. Higher levels indicate more severe infection and have been used as an indicator of COVID-19 disease severity. However, the evidence for CRP as a prognostic marker is yet to be determined. The aim of this study is to examine the CRP response in patients hospitalized with COVID-19 and to determine the utility of CRP on admission for predicting inpatient mortality. METHODS: Data were collected between 27 February and 10 June 2020, incorporating two cohorts: the COPE (COVID-19 in Older People) study of 1564 adult patients with a diagnosis of COVID-19 admitted to 11 hospital sites (test cohort) and a later validation cohort of 271 patients. Admission CRP was investigated, and finite mixture models were fit to assess the likely underlying distribution. Further, different prognostic thresholds of CRP were analysed in a time-to-mortality Cox regression to determine a cut-off. Bootstrapping was used to compare model performance [Harrell's C statistic and Akaike information criterion (AIC)]. RESULTS: The test and validation cohort distribution of CRP was not affected by age, and mixture models indicated a bimodal distribution. A threshold cut-off of CRP ≥40 mg/L performed well to predict mortality (and performed similarly to treating CRP as a linear variable). CONCLUSIONS: The distributional characteristics of CRP indicated an optimal cut-off of ≥40 mg/L was associated with mortality. This threshold may assist clinicians in using CRP as an early trigger for enhanced observation, treatment decisions and advanced care planning.


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