The European respiratory journal : official journal of the European Society for Clinical Respiratory Physiology
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Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) represents a major life-threatening infection, but disease course and outcome is highly variable. Major drivers of prognosis are respiratory failure, sepsis-related organ dysfunction and unstable comorbidities. Current risk stratification tools have been primarily designed to predict mortality and identify low risk patients potentially suitable for ambulatory management. ⋯ New cardiovascular or stress-related biomarkers like copeptin, midregional proadrenomedullin and cortisol have been repeatedly linked with outcome and disease course in CAP and improved clinical scoring in observational studies. Thus they represent promising tools for individualised risk stratification. A major task in future CAP research will be the evaluation of their additional value in large interventional trials with control groups incorporating strict management guidance by clinical criteria.