Immunological Monitoring of Sepsis Using Flow Cytometry – Quantitation of Monocyte HLA-DR Expression and Granulocyte CD64 Expression
																	
									Authors:
											Lenka Sedláčková						1; 											M. Průcha						1; 											M. Dostál						2										
				
									Authors‘ workplace:
											Oddělení klinické biochemie, hematologie a imunologie Nemocnice Na Homolce, Praha
						1; 											Ústav experimentální medicíny AV ČR, Praha
						2										
				
									Published in:
					Epidemiol. Mikrobiol. Imunol. 54, 2005, č. 2, s. 54-61
					
				
				
							
Overview
Background:
 Sepsis is a serious disease with a high case fatality rate. A variety of changes in the host immune responsiveness are observed in the pathogenesis of sepsis, ranging from detrimental hyperinflammation to profound immunoparalysis, i.e. acquired immunodeficiency. The level of monocyte HLA-DR expression reflects the functional status of monocytes as antigen-presenting cells and granulocyte CD64 expression is also indicative of infectious inflammation.
Material and Methods:
 Monocyte HLA-DR expression and granulocyte CD64 expression were measured in 49 septic patients and 30 healthy controls using flow cytometry focused on three parameters: positive cell percentage, mean fluorescence intensity and quantitation of antibodies bound per cell (QuantiBRITE).
Results:
 The significance of both monocyte HLA-DR expression and granulocyte CD64 expression in septic patients was confirmed. Monocyte HLA-DR dramatically decreases in septic patients compared to controls, is one of the prognostic factors and correlates with C-reactive protein. In contrast, granulocyte CD64 sharply rises in patients with sepsis and correlates with mediators of systemic inflammation (procalcitonin – PCT), proinflammatory mediators (interleukin-6 – IL-6, lipopolysaccharide binding protein – LBP) and anti-inflammatory cytokines (interleukin-10 – IL - 10).
Conclusion:
 Quantitative monocyte HLA-DR expression and granulocyte CD64 expression are useful indicators in septic patients when considered along with the panel of other markers, monitored over a period of time and in the context of the clinical course of sepsis.
Key words:
 sepsis – immunoparalysis – HLA-DR – CD64 – QuantiBRITE.
Labels
Hygiene and epidemiology Medical virology Clinical microbiologyArticle was published in
Epidemiology, Microbiology, Immunology
					2005 Issue 2
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