Association of Daily Body Temperature, White Blood Cell Count, and C-reactive Protein With Mortality and Persistent Bacteremia in Patients With Staphylococcus Aureus Bacteremia: A Post Hoc Analysis of the CAMERA2 Randomized Clinical Trial

CAMERA2 study group

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Abstract

Introduction: Classification of patients with Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia as complicated versus uncomplicated is based on a combination of clinical and microbiologic variables. Whether daily body temperature and common laboratory tests such as C-reactive protein (CRP) and white blood cell (WBC) can improve risk stratification algorithms is unclear. Methods: We conducted a post hoc secondary analysis of the CAMERA2 trial, which enrolled hospitalized adult patients with methicillin-resistant S aureus bacteremia and prospectively collected daily body temperature and peripheral blood WBC and CRP. We evaluated the prognostic relevance of each parameter by calculating crude and adjusted odds ratios for 90-day all-cause mortality comparing patients with the abnormal parameter of interest versus those with normal parameters on each day of illness. Results: A total of 345 patients were included in this analysis, of whom 63 (18.3%) died within 90 days. Fever (body temperature ≥38.0 °C) was associated with increased odds of 90-day mortality from day 4 and onwards. Fever later in the illness course was associated with higher adjusted odds of mortality (8.78; 95% confidence interval, 2.78-27.7 on day 7 vs adjusted odds ratio 3.70; 95% CI, 1.58-8.67 on day 4). In contrast, CRP and abnormal WBC count did not demonstrate a consistent or temporal association with mortality. Conclusions: Persistent fever after 72 hours is associated with increased mortality in patients with methicillin-resistant S aureus bacteremia, supporting recommendations that this should be kept as a criterion for classifying patients as either "high-risk"or "complicated."Within this dataset, there was limited additional predictive value in WBC or CRP.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberofaf063
JournalOpen Forum Infectious Diseases
Volume12
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Feb 2025

Funding

FundersFunder number
University of Toronto
Connaught International Scholarship
University of Melbourne
Queen Elizabeth II Graduate Scholarship in Science and Technology
National Health and Medical Research Council1078930
National Medical Research Council0001-001094
Ramiciotti FoundationES2014/079

    Keywords

    • MRSA
    • c-reactive protein
    • risk stratification
    • staphylococcus aureus bacteremia
    • white blood cell

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