Sensitivity and Specificity of the Neutrophil Lymphocyte Ratio (NLR) in Diagnosing Late Onset Neonatal Sepsis in NICU Patients

Zunaira Zulfiqar
Unaiza Syed
Syed Arsalan Hassan
Nabeera Hayat
Hamza Khursheed
Abu Bakar Khan
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Objective: To compare the sensitivity and specificity of the neutrophil lymphocyte ratio in diagnosing late onset neonatal sepsis in NICU patients at a tertiary care center Study Design and Setting: Prospective observational study at Department of Pediatrics, Combined Military Hospital, Lahore from February 2024-July 2024 Methodology: After admission into the NICU for suspected late onset neonatal sepsis, complete blood count, C-reactive protein and blood cultures were sent before changing or starting broad spectrum anti-biotic therapy for 350 patients included in the study. Primary variables observed were sensitivity and specificity of the neutrophil lymphocyte ratio in diagnosing late onset sepsis once co-related with the culture results. Results: Blood panel parameters showed mean absolute neutrophil count to be 5928.19796.05/mm3versus 7032.80166.02/mm3 between the suspected and confirmed patients’ groups (p<0.001). Similarly, mean absolute lymphocyte count was 2745.32394.53/mm3 versus 3223.60278.90/mm3 between both groups (p<0.001). Median value for NLR was 1.70 (1.00) versus 2.20 (1.00) between the suspected and confirmed culture groups (p<0.001). Assessment of receiver operating characteristics (ROC) for NLR when compared with suspected and confirmed sepsis showed area under the curve being 0.644 (CI=95%) with sensitivity of 74.6%, specificity of 55.6%, positive predictive value being 57.3% and negative predictive value being 73.3% with a cut-off value for NLR being 2.05. Conclusion: We conclude that neutrophil lymphocyte ratio with a cut-off value of 2.05 is a reliable method to diagnose late onset neonatal sepsis with good sensitivity

Published: 2025-01-07

Last Modified: 2025-03-20 03:13:39