KAKoceila Amroun
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Inflammatory biomarke…
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Zoubir Djerada
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Centre Hospitalier Un…

Papers

Inflammatory biomarkers to predict postoperative infectious complications after cytoreductive surgery and HIPEC for peritoneal carcinomatosis

Early detection of postoperative infectious complications (IC) is crucial after Cytoreductive surgery with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (CRS/HIPEC). The aim of this study was to evaluate the predictive role of early postoperative inflammatory biomarkers level for the detection of postoperative IC. a retrospective study was performed including 199 patients treated with complete CRS/HIPEC for PC from various primary origins from September 2012 to January 2021. Patients were monitored by a routine measurement of inflammatory biomarkers (CRP, leukocytes, neutrophils, lymphocytes, neutrophile-to-lymphocyte ratio and platelets-to-lymphocyte ratio). Inflammatory biomarkers were compared between patients with vs without IC. IC occurred for 68 patients (34.2%). CRP values were significantly higher in patients with IC on POD 3, 5 and 7 (CRP = 166 mg/L [128-244], 155 mg/L [102-222] and 207 mg/L [135-259], respectively). The CRP on POD7, with a cut-off value of 100 mg/L, was an excellent predictor of postoperative IC (AUC = 90.1%). The CRP on POD 5, with a cut-off value of 90 mg/L, was a good predictor of postoperative IC (AUC = 83.2%). NLR values were significantly higher in patients with IC on POD 3, 5 and 7. NLR on POD 5 and 7 higher than 9.7 and 6.3, respectively, were fair predictors (AUC = 70.8 and 79.6, respectively). CRP levels between POD3 and 7 are the best predictors of postoperative IC after CRS/HIPEC. The presence of postoperative IC should be suspected in patients with CRP higher than 140 mg/L, 90 mg/L or 100 mg/L on PODs 3, 5 or 7.

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