TY - JOUR T1 - Are C-reactive protein levels associated with bacteria in COPD exacerbations? JF - European Respiratory Journal JO - Eur Respir J SP - 1515 LP - 1516 DO - 10.1183/09031936.00020015 VL - 45 IS - 5 AU - Tristan W. Clark Y1 - 2015/05/01 UR - http://erj.ersjournals.com/content/45/5/1515.abstract N2 - We thank M. Miravitlles and C. Llor for their comments. While we do, of course, agree with their statement that it is impossible to detect bacteria when no sample is obtained, this issue is addressed in our study by the subgroup analysis, which examines only those patients with sputum samples tested for bacteria. This group demonstrates identical findings to our main cohort: that C-reactive protein (CRP) levels and body temperature are strongly associated with viral detection (either alone or with bacteria) but not with bacterial detection alone, and suggests that the findings in the main cohort are not due to a lack of sputum samples. We would also like to point out that it is similarly impossible to detect viruses if one does not test for them and of the studies referenced by M. Miravitlles and C. Llor as demonstrating an association between CRP level, sputum purulence and bacterial detection [1–5], none has tested for respiratory viruses apart from that by Daniels et al. [5] and this was not in a standard manner. Interestingly, another study referenced by the authors [6] did systematically test patients with exacerbations for both viruses and bacteria, and demonstrated that although infective exacerbations were associated with sputum purulence compared with those where no pathogen was detected, it found no difference in sputum purulence between exacerbations with viral or bacterial detection. It is also notable that in the randomised, placebo-controlled trial of doxycycline by Daniels et al. [5], although there was a weak association between CRP levels >50 mg·L−1 and a favourable response to antibiotics, there was no demonstrable association between antibiotic response and bacterial detection. Viruses were not tested for in a meaningful way in this study but only by serology for selected viruses, and patients with fever were excluded, which would be likely to exclude many patients with viruses. No analysis was conducted to examine the association between the small number of viruses detected by serology and CRP, sputum purulence or response to antibiotics. Therefore, the place of viral detection within this evidence base is uncertain and any conclusion about associations between bacterial detection, sputum purulence, CRP levels and response to antibiotics must acknowledge this uncertainty. Viruses detected are likely to be causally related to patients' inflammatory responses and thus COPD exacerbation http://ow.ly/KeMPc ER -