Eosinopenia as predictor of infection in patients admitted to an internal medicine ward: a cross-sectional study.

2020 
Background The identification of infection in an internal medicine ward is crucial but not always straightforward. Eosinopenia has been proposed as a marker of infection, but specific cutoffs for prediction are not established yet. We aim to assess whether there is difference in eosinophil count between infected and noninfected patients and, if so, the best cutoffs to differentiate them. Methods Cross-sectional, observational study with analysis of all patients admitted to an Internal Medicine Department during 2 consecutive months. Clinical, laboratory and imaging data were analyzed. Infection at hospital admission was defined in the presence of either a microbiological isolation or suggestive clinical, laboratory, and/or imaging findings. Use of antibiotics in the 8 days before hospital admission, presence of immunosuppression, hematologic neoplasms, parasite, or fungal infections were exclusion criteria. In case of multiple hospital admissions, only the first admission was considered.Sensitivity and specificity values for eosinophils, leukocytes, neutrophils, and C-reactive protein were determined by receiver operating characteristic curve. Statistical analysis was performed with IBM SPSS Statistics® v25 and MedCalc Statistical Software® v19.2.3. Results A total of 323 hospitalization episodes were evaluated, each corresponding to a different patient. One hundred fifteen patients were excluded. A total of 208 patients were included, 62.0% (n = 129) of them infected at admission. Ten patients had multiple infections.Infected patients had fewer eosinophils than uninfected patients (15.8 ± 42 vs 71.1 ± 159 cell/mm3; P  77 cells/mm3 had a negative likelihood ratio of 0.16. Conclusions Eosinophil count was significantly lower in infected than in uninfected patients. The cutoff 69 cells/mm3 was the most accurate in predicting infection. Eosinophil count >77 cells/mm3 was a good predictor of absence of infection.
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