A 70-year-old lady was referred by GP with h/o productive cough for 10 days. She completed a course of Amoxicillin with no improvement in her symptoms.
She did not have any previous medical history and did not take any regular medications.
She was a heavy smoker for 40 years. She lived alone independently.
Temp. 37.0°C
HR: 110/ min
B.P: 138/70 mm of Hg
CVS: I-II normal
Lungs: RR – 20/ min
Crepts+ at right base
O2 saturation: 95% on room air
CNS: No focal neurology
WBC: 32 X 10 (9)/ L
Neutrophils: 28 X 10 (9)/L
CRP: 284 mg/dL
CXR: Cavitating consolidation at right lower lobe
NICE guidance recommends
(NICE does recommend CURB-65 as decision making tool for hospital admission or discharge)
The acute phase reactant CRP is a sensitive marker of progress in pneumonia. Prospective studies have shown that repeat measurement of CRP at day 3 or 4 is helpful in identifying patients with treatment failure.
A failure of CRP to fall by 50% is associated with increased 30-day mortality, increased need for mechanical ventilation and/or inotropic support and increased incidence of complicated pneumonia such as empyema.
C-reactive protein (CRP) is an acute phase protein synthesized by the liver primarily in response inflammation.
Some clinicians believe that CRP is CRAP and it does not add any value in the diagnosis or management of patients.
Many studies have refuted this claim. It is evident that higher CRP levels are associated with the worse outcomes. It is the clinician’s responsibility to correlate result with the patient’s presentation. Ultimately the decision should be based on the overall picture and involving patient in the decision making process.