Artículos de revistas
Comparison of interleukin-6 plasma concentration in multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children associated with SARS-CoV-2 and pediatric sepsis
Fecha
2021Registro en:
Frontiers in Pediatrics November 2021 Volume 9 Article 756083
10.3389/fped.2021.756083
Autor
Díaz, Franco
Bustos B., Raúl
Yagnam Rojas, Felipe Nicolás
Karsies, Todd J.
Vásquez Hoyos, Pablo
Jaramillo Bustamante, Juan Camilo
González Dambrauskas, Sebastián
Drago Thibaut, Michele Denise
Cruces, Pablo
Institución
Resumen
Importance: Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children (MIS-C) associated with
SARS-CoV-2 infection is thought to be driven by a post-viral dysregulated immune
response, where interleukin 6 (IL-6)might have a central role. In this setting, IL-6 inhibitors
are prescribed as immunomodulation in cases refractory to standard therapy.
Objective: To compare plasma IL-6 concentration between critically ill children with
MIS-C and sepsis.
Design: A retrospective cohort study from previously collected data.
Setting: Individual patient data were gathered from three different international datasets.
Participants: Critically ill children between 1 month-old and 18 years old, with an IL-6
levelmeasured within 48 h of admission to intensive care. Septic patients were diagnosed
according to Surviving Sepsis Campaign definition and MIS-C cases by CDC criteria.We
excluded children with immunodeficiency or immunosuppressive therapy.
Exposure: None.
Main Outcome(s) and Measure(s): The primary outcome was IL-6 plasma
concentration in MIS-C and sepsis group at admission to the intensive care unit.
We described demographics, inflammatory biomarkers, and clinical outcomes for both
groups. A subgroup analysis for shock in each group was done.
Results: We analyzed 66 patients with MIS-C and 44 patients with sepsis. MIS-C cases
were older [96 (48, 144) vs. 20 (5, 132) months old, p < 0.01], but no differences in sex (41 vs. 43% female, p = 0.8) compared to septic group. Mechanical ventilation use was
48.5 vs. 93% (p < 0.001), vasoactive drug use 79 vs. 66% (p = 0.13), and mortality
4.6 vs. 34.1% (p < 0.01) in MIS-C group compared to sepsis. IL-6 was 156 (36, 579)
ng/dl in MIS-C and 1,432 (122, 6,886) ng/dl in sepsis (p < 0.01), while no significant
differences were observed in procalcitonin (PCT) and c-reactive protein (CRP). 52/66
(78.8%) patients had shock in MIS-C group, and 29/44 (65.9%) had septic shock in
sepsis group. Septic shock had a significantly higher plasma IL-6 concentration than the
three other sub-groups. Differences in IL-6, CRP, and PCT were not statistically different
between MIS-C with and without shock.
Conclusions and Relevance: IL-6 plasma concentration was elevated in critically ill
MIS-C patients but at levels much lower than those of sepsis. Furthermore, IL-6 levels
don’t discriminate between MIS-C cases with and without shock. These results lead us
to question the role of IL-6 in the pathobiology of MIS-C, its diagnosis, clinical outcomes,
and, more importantly, the off-label use of IL-6 inhibitors for these cases.