Robustness of sepsis-3 criteria in critically ill patients

Publication date

2019-08-29

Authors

Verboom, Diana M
Frencken, Jos FISNI 000000039124204X
Ong, David S. Y.ORCID 0000-0001-5688-6443
Horn, Janneke
van der Poll, Tom
Bonten, Marc J MISNI 0000000034264654
Cremer, OlafORCID 0000-0003-4264-1108ISNI 0000000387039874
Klein Klouwenberg, Peter M. C.ISNI 0000000388288696

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Abstract

Background: Early recognition of sepsis is challenging, and diagnostic criteria have changed repeatedly. We assessed the robustness of sepsis-3 criteria in intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Methods: We studied the apparent incidence and associated mortality of sepsis-3 among patients who were prospectively enrolled in the Molecular Diagnosis and Risk Stratification of Sepsis (MARS) cohort in the Netherlands, and explored the effects of minor variations in the precise definition and timing of diagnostic criteria for organ failure. Results: Among 1081 patients with suspected infection upon ICU admission, 648 (60%) were considered to have sepsis according to prospective adjudication in the MARS study, whereas 976 (90%) met sepsis-3 criteria, yielding only 64% agreement at the individual patient level. Among 501 subjects developing ICU-acquired infection, these rates were 270 (54%) and 260 (52%), respectively (yielding 58% agreement). Hospital mortality was 234 (36%) vs 277 (28%) for those meeting MARS-sepsis or sepsis-3 criteria upon presentation (p < 0.001), and 121 (45%) vs 103 (40%) for those having sepsis onset in the ICU (p < 0.001). Minor variations in timing and interpretation of organ failure criteria had a considerable effect on the apparent prevalence of sepsis-3, which ranged from 68 to 96% among those with infection at admission, and from 22 to 99% among ICU-acquired cases. Conclusion: The sepsis-3 definition lacks robustness as well as discriminatory ability, since nearly all patients presenting to ICU with suspected infection fulfill its criteria. These should therefore be specified in greater detail, and applied more consistently, during future sepsis studies. Trial registration: The MARS study is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (identifier NCT01905033).

Keywords

Critical care, Incidence, Infection, Mortality, Sepsis, Septic shock, Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine, Journal Article

Citation

Verboom, D M, Frencken, J F, Ong, D S Y, Horn, J, van der Poll, T, Bonten, M J M, Cremer, O L & Klein Klouwenberg, P M C 2019, 'Robustness of sepsis-3 criteria in critically ill patients', Journal of Intensive Care, vol. 7, no. 1, 46. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40560-019-0400-6