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Validation of the new Sepsis-3 definitions: proposal for improvement in early risk identification

Authors :
G. Vlachogiannis
Anastasia Kotanidou
Vasilios Koulouras
K Mandragos
Thomas Tsaganos
Evangelos J. Giamarellos-Bourboulis
Charalambos Gogos
Ioannis Koutelidakis
Athanassios Prekates
Marina Koupetori
Christina Routsi
Antonia Koutsoukou
Georgios Adamis
George N. Dalekos
Eleni Antoniadou
George Giannikopoulos
Stylianos E. Orfanos
I. Pnevmatikos
Dimitrios Sinapidis
Maria Pavlaki
Malvina Lada
A. Ioakeimidou
Ioannis Kritselis
Apostolos Armaganidis
George Dimopoulos
Magdalini Bristianou
Iraklis Tsangaris
Source :
Clinical microbiology and infection : the official publication of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases. 23(2)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Sepsis-3 definitions generated controversies regarding their general applicability. The Sepsis-3 Task Force outlined the need for validation with emphasis on the quick Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (qSOFA) score. This was done in a prospective cohort from a different healthcare setting.Patients with infections and at least two signs of systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) were analysed. Sepsis was defined as total SOFA ≥2 outside the intensive care unit (ICU) or as an increase of ICU admission SOFA ≥2. The primary endpoints were the sensitivity of qSOFA outside the ICU and sepsis definition both outside and within the ICU to predict mortality.In all, 3346 infections outside the ICU and 1058 infections in the ICU were analysed. Outside the ICU, respective mortality with ≥2 SIRS and qSOFA ≥2 was 25.3% and 41.2% (p0.0001); the sensitivities of qSOFA and of sepsis definition to predict death were 60.8% and 87.2%, respectively. This was 95.9% for sepsis definition in the ICU. The sensitivity of qSOFA and of ≥3 SIRS criteria for organ dysfunction outside the ICU was 48.7% and 72.5%, respectively (p0.0001). Misclassification outside the ICU with the 1991 and Sepsis-3 definitions into stages of lower severity was 21.4% and 3.7%, respectively (p0.0001) and 14.9% and 3.7%, respectively, in the ICU (p0.0001). Adding arterial pH ≤7.30 to qSOFA increased sensitivity for prediction of death to 67.5% (p 0.004).Our analysis positively validated the use of SOFA score to predict unfavourable outcome and to limit misclassification into lower severity. However, qSOFA score had inadequate sensitivity for early risk assessment.

Details

ISSN :
14690691
Volume :
23
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical microbiology and infection : the official publication of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1b5d50392f2bd5e43c69d10e5b6e2b6f