• Critical care medicine · Apr 2011

    Use of risk reclassification with multiple biomarkers improves mortality prediction in acute lung injury.

    • Carolyn S Calfee, Lorraine B Ware, David V Glidden, Mark D Eisner, Polly E Parsons, B Taylor Thompson, Michael A Matthay, and National Heart, Blood, and Lung Institute Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Network.
    • Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143-0111, USA. carolyn.calfee@ucsf.edu
    • Crit. Care Med. 2011 Apr 1;39(4):711-7.

    ObjectiveMultiple single biomarkers have been associated with poor outcomes in acute lung injury; however, no single biomarker has sufficient discriminating power to clearly indicate prognosis. Using both derivation and replication cohorts, we tested novel risk reclassification methods to determine whether measurement of multiple plasma biomarkers at the time of acute lung injury diagnosis would improve mortality prediction in acute lung injury.DesignAnalysis of plasma biomarker levels and prospectively collected clinical data from patients enrolled in two randomized controlled trials of ventilator therapy for acute lung injury.SettingIntensive care units of university hospitals participating in the National Institutes of Health Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Network.PatientsSubjects enrolled in a trial of lower tidal volume ventilation (derivation cohort) and subjects enrolled in a trial of higher vs. lower positive end-expiratory pressure (replication cohort).InterventionsNone.Measurements And Main ResultsThe plasma biomarkers were intercellular adhesion molecule-1, von Willebrand factor, interleukin-8, soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor-1, and surfactant protein-D. In the derivation cohort (n = 547), adding data on these biomarkers to clinical predictors (Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation III score) at the time of study enrollment improved the accuracy of risk prediction, as reflected by a net reclassification improvement of 22% (95% confidence interval 13% to 32%; p < .001). In the replication cohort (n = 500), the net reclassification improvement was 17% (95% confidence interval 7% to 26%; p < .001). A reduced set of three biomarkers (interleukin-8, soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor-1, and surfactant protein-D) had nearly equivalent prognostic value in both cohorts.ConclusionsWhen combined with clinical data, plasma biomarkers measured at the onset of acute lung injury can improve the accuracy of risk prediction. Combining three or more biomarkers may be useful for selecting a high-risk acute lung injury population for enrollment in clinical trials of novel therapies.

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