Clinical Characteristics and Laboratory Biomarkers in ICU-admitted Septic Patients with and without Bacteremia
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 05:17 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A seven-variable logistic model predicts bacteremia among septic ICU patients with AUC 0.907.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
In 218 adult septic patients admitted to one ICU in 2019, 48 had culture-confirmed bacteremia. Procalcitonin and C-reactive protein each showed useful discrimination, but the multivariable logistic regression that combined procalcitonin, bilirubin, neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio, platelets, lactic acid, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and Glasgow Coma Scale score produced an AUC of 0.907. Bacteremia was further associated with increased mortality on survival analysis.
What carries the argument
The multivariable logistic regression model fitted on the seven selected laboratory and clinical variables.
If this is right
- The combined model separates bacteremic from non-bacteremic sepsis more accurately than procalcitonin alone.
- Confirmed bacteremia tracks with elevated mortality in this population.
- Routine clinical data already collected at admission can be reused for the prediction without new tests.
- C-reactive protein alone performs less well than the full multivariable set.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- If the model holds on new data, it could shorten the interval between ICU arrival and targeted therapy decisions.
- The same variables might be tested for predicting other culture-positive infections in critical care.
- Coefficient stability would need checking across different hospital settings and sepsis definitions.
Load-bearing premise
The 48 bacteremia and 170 non-bacteremia cases drawn from a single 2019 ICU cohort are representative enough for the fitted coefficients to apply elsewhere.
What would settle it
Fitting the same seven-variable model to blood-culture results from an independent multi-center cohort of septic ICU patients and checking whether the AUC stays above 0.85.
read the original abstract
Few studies have investigated the diagnostic utilities of biomarkers for predicting bacteremia among septic patients admitted to intensive care units (ICU). Therefore, this study evaluated the prediction power of laboratory biomarkers to utilize those markers with high performance to optimize the predictive model for bacteremia. This retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted at the ICU department of Gyeongsang National University Changwon Hospital in 2019. Adult patients qualifying SEPSIS-3 (increase in sequential organ failure score greater than or equal to 2) criteria with at least two sets of blood culture were selected. Collected data was initially analyzed independently to identify the significant predictors, which was then used to build the multivariable logistic regression (MLR) model. A total of 218 patients with 48 cases of true bacteremia were analyzed in this research. Both CRP and PCT showed a substantial area under the curve (AUC) value for discriminating bacteremia among septic patients (0.757 and 0.845, respectively). To further enhance the predictive accuracy, we combined PCT, bilirubin, neutrophil lymphocyte ratio (NLR), platelets, lactic acid, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), and Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score to build the predictive model with an AUC of 0.907 (95% CI, 0.843 to 0.956). In addition, a high association between bacteremia and mortality rate was discovered through the survival analysis (0.004). While PCT is certainly a useful index for distinguishing patients with and without bacteremia by itself, our MLR model indicates that the accuracy of bacteremia prediction substantially improves by the combined use of PCT, bilirubin, NLR, platelets, lactic acid, ESR, and GCS score.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript reports a retrospective analysis of 218 septic ICU patients (48 with true bacteremia) from a single 2019 cohort. It claims that CRP and PCT individually discriminate bacteremia with AUCs of 0.757 and 0.845, respectively, and that a seven-predictor multivariable logistic regression (MLR) model using PCT, bilirubin, NLR, platelets, lactic acid, ESR, and GCS achieves an AUC of 0.907 (95% CI 0.843–0.956). It further reports a significant association between bacteremia and mortality via survival analysis (p=0.004).
Significance. If the AUC claim were shown to be robust under internal validation and external testing, the combined biomarker model could meaningfully improve early bacteremia prediction in sepsis and support more targeted antibiotic use. The work adds to existing literature on PCT and related markers but currently offers no evidence that the reported performance generalizes beyond the fitting cohort.
major comments (3)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the AUC of 0.907 is obtained by fitting seven coefficients to the identical 218-patient dataset (48 events) with no mention of variable selection procedure, internal validation (cross-validation, bootstrap, or split-sample), or calibration; the performance metric is therefore not independent of the model-fitting process.
- [Abstract] Abstract: with only 48 positive events for a 7-predictor logistic regression the analysis falls below the conventional 10-events-per-predictor guideline, creating a direct risk of optimistic bias in the reported AUC and coefficient estimates.
- [Abstract] Abstract: the survival-analysis result (p=0.004) linking bacteremia to mortality supplies no information on the statistical method, follow-up time, censoring, or adjustment for confounders, rendering this secondary claim uninterpretable.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the design is labeled both 'retrospective cross-sectional' and as including survival analysis; clarify how longitudinal mortality data were obtained within a cross-sectional frame.
- [Abstract] Abstract: no information is given on missing-data handling or the exact criteria used to retain the seven predictors in the final MLR model.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive comments. We respond point by point to the major comments and indicate planned revisions.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the AUC of 0.907 is obtained by fitting seven coefficients to the identical 218-patient dataset (48 events) with no mention of variable selection procedure, internal validation (cross-validation, bootstrap, or split-sample), or calibration; the performance metric is therefore not independent of the model-fitting process.
Authors: We agree that the reported AUC is apparent performance without internal validation or calibration. In revision we will add bootstrap internal validation with optimism-corrected AUC and calibration plots. revision: yes
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: with only 48 positive events for a 7-predictor logistic regression the analysis falls below the conventional 10-events-per-predictor guideline, creating a direct risk of optimistic bias in the reported AUC and coefficient estimates.
Authors: The referee correctly notes the events-per-predictor ratio of ~6.9. This is a limitation of the single-center sample. We will discuss the risk of overfitting, report sensitivity analyses with fewer predictors or penalized regression, and note this as a study limitation. revision: partial
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the survival-analysis result (p=0.004) linking bacteremia to mortality supplies no information on the statistical method, follow-up time, censoring, or adjustment for confounders, rendering this secondary claim uninterpretable.
Authors: We agree the abstract omits these details. The manuscript uses Kaplan-Meier with log-rank test; we will expand the abstract and methods to specify follow-up duration, censoring, and any confounder adjustment. revision: yes
Circularity Check
In-sample AUC 0.907 reported as 'predictive' performance for 7-predictor MLR fitted on the identical 218-patient cohort
specific steps
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fitted input called prediction
[abstract]
"we combined PCT, bilirubin, neutrophil lymphocyte ratio (NLR), platelets, lactic acid, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), and Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score to build the predictive model with an AUC of 0.907 (95% CI, 0.843 to 0.956)"
Coefficients for the seven predictors are estimated from the 218-patient dataset; the AUC is then computed on that same dataset. With no validation procedure stated, the quoted 'predictive' AUC reduces directly to the in-sample goodness-of-fit of the fitted model.
full rationale
The paper's central claim is that combining seven biomarkers into an MLR yields AUC 0.907 for bacteremia prediction. Data collection, predictor selection, coefficient fitting, and AUC calculation all occur on the single 2019 ICU cohort of 218 patients (48 events). No train/test split, cross-validation, bootstrap, or external validation is described, so the reported AUC is the in-sample fit statistic rather than an independent prediction. This matches the 'fitted input called prediction' pattern exactly; the performance number is statistically forced by the fitting step itself. No other circularity patterns (self-definition, self-citation chains, ansatz smuggling, etc.) are present in the available text.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (1)
- logistic regression coefficients for the seven predictors
axioms (2)
- domain assumption Logistic regression assumptions (linearity of logit, no perfect multicollinearity, independent observations) hold for these clinical variables
- domain assumption Blood culture results accurately classify true bacteremia versus contamination or false negatives
Lean theorems connected to this paper
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IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/RealityFromDistinction.leanreality_from_one_distinction unclear?
unclearRelation between the paper passage and the cited Recognition theorem.
our MLR model indicates that the accuracy of bacteremia prediction substantially improves by the combined use of PCT, bilirubin, NLR, platelets, lactic acid, ESR, and GCS score (AUC 0.907)
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
discussion (0)
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