Systematic review and consensus definitions for the Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative: infection and sepsis

Publication date

2019-04

Authors

Barnes, Jonathan
Hunter, Jennifer
Harris, Steve
Shankar-Hari, Manu
Diouf, Elisabeth
Jammer, Ib
Kalkman, Cor J.ORCID 0000-0002-8372-6960ISNI 0000000390649876
Klein, Andrew A.
Corcoran, Tomas
Dieleman, Jan M.ORCID 0000-0001-5867-9341ISNI 0000000394296721

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Background: Perioperative infection and sepsis are of fundamental concern to perioperative clinicians. However, standardised endpoints are either poorly defined or not routinely implemented. The Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative was established to derive a set of standardised endpoints for use in perioperative clinical trials. Methods: We undertook a systematic review to identify measures of infection and sepsis used in the perioperative literature. A multi-round Delphi consensus process that included more than 60 clinician researchers was then used to refine a recommended list of outcome measures. Results: A literature search yielded 1857 titles of which 255 met inclusion criteria for endpoint extraction. A long list of endpoints, with definitions and timescales, was generated and those potentially relevant to infection and sepsis circulated to the theme subgroup and then the wider StEP-COMPAC working group, undergoing a three-stage Delphi process. The response rates for Delphi rounds 1, 3, and 3 were 89% (n=8), 67% (n=62), and 80% (n=8), respectively. A set of 13 endpoints including fever, surgical site, and organ-specific infections as defined by the US Centres for Disease Control and Sepsis-3 are proposed for future use. Conclusions: We defined a consensus list of standardised endpoints related to infection and sepsis for perioperative trials using an established and rigorous approach. Each endpoint was evaluated with respect to validity, reliability, feasibility, and patient centredness. One or more of these should be considered for inclusion in future perioperative clinical trials assessing infection, sepsis, or both, thereby permitting synthesis and comparison of future results.

Keywords

anaesthesia, core outcome measures, infection, perioperative medicine, postoperative outcome, sepsis, standardised endpoints, surgical site infection, Taverne, Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Citation

Barnes, J, Hunter, J, Harris, S, Shankar-Hari, M, Diouf, E, Jammer, I, Kalkman, C, Klein, A A, Corcoran, T, Dieleman, S, Grocott, M P W, Mythen, M G, Myles, P, Gan, T J, Kurz, A, Peyton, P, Sessler, D, Tramèr, M, Cyna, A, De Oliveira, G S, Wu, C, Jensen, M, Kehlet, H, Botti, M, Boney, O, Haller, G, Grocott, M, Cook, T, Fleisher, L, Neuman, M, Story, D, Gruen, R, Bampoe, S, Evered, L, Scott, D, Silbert, B, van Dijk, D, Chan, M, Grocott, H, Eckenhoff, R, Rasmussen, L, Eriksson, L, Beattie, S, Wijeysundera, D, Landoni, G, Leslie, K, Biccard, B, Howell, S, Nagele, P, van Klei, W & The StEP-COMPAC Group 2019, 'Systematic review and consensus definitions for the Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine (StEP) initiative : infection and sepsis', British Journal of Anaesthesia, vol. 122, no. 4, pp. 500-508. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bja.2019.01.009