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Discriminative power of organ-specific SOFA assessment in burn sepsis: A temporal biomarker analysis

Revista

Burns

Fecha de publicación

26 de noviembre de 2025

Burns. 2025 Nov 7;52(1):107771. doi: 10.1016/j.burns.2025.107771. Online ahead of print.

BACKGROUND: Severe burn patients face diagnostic challenges in distinguishing sepsis from systemic inflammation using Sepsis-3 criteria. Current Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) validation studies focus on composite scores, neglecting subsystem-level analysis in burn-specific pathophysiology.

METHODS: This retrospective cohort study analyzed 55 severe burn patients (TBSA>30 %) from a Chinese burn center (2021-2022), comparing 19 sepsis cases with 36 controls. We analyzed SOFA subsystems and biomarkers (creatinine, platelet count, NT-proBNP, and PCT) during both the early phase (days 1 and 3 post-burn) and the late phase (after day 3 post-burn), performed TBSA-adjusted logistic regression, and constructed a nomogram.

RESULTS: Cardiovascular (84.2 % vs 2.8 %, p < 0.001), renal (31.6 % vs 0 %, p < 0.001), and coagulation (42.1 % vs 5.6 %, p < 0.001) subsystems showed superior diagnostic specificity. Platelet trajectories revealed critical divergence at day 3 (septic: 66 vs control: 120 ×10⁹/L, p < 0.001), while creatinine elevation persisted across phases (day 1: 100 vs 62 μmol/L, p < 0.001, day 3: 84 vs 65 μmol/L, and late phase: 118 vs 58μmol/L, p < 0.001). PCT demonstrated isolated diagnostic utility confined to the late phase (6.12 vs 0.55 μg/L, p < 0.001). Day 3 platelet count, late-phase creatinine, and PCT were incorporated into the nomogram, which achieved an AUC of 0.930 in ROC analysis.

CONCLUSION: Subsystem-specific SOFA analysis identifies creatinine elevation and thrombocytopenia as key sepsis indicators in burns. Serial platelet and creatinine monitoring from day 3 post-injury enhances early detection, while PCT demonstrates diagnostic utility only in the late phase. A clinically applicable nomogram was developed to predict sepsis risk. These findings suggest that these specific organ systems are the principal contributors to the SOFA score in burn-related sepsis.

PubMed:41297233 | DOI:10.1016/j.burns.2025.107771

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El idioma original es este artículo es el inglés. Mediante el sistema de traducción automático de la IA de emergencing, el contenido se ha traducido al español. Esta es una traducción no supervisada por lo que puede que alguna parte del contenido no refleje con exactitud la publicación original del autor/autores.