Systemic Inflammatory Response and Progression to Severe Sepsis in Critically Ill Infected Patients
- 1 March 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Thoracic Society in American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
- Vol. 171 (5), 461-468
- https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.200403-324oc
Abstract
Rationale: The systemic inflammatory response syndrome has low specificity to identify infected patients at risk of worsening to severe sepsis or shock. Objective: To examine the incidence of and risk factors for worsening sepsis in infected patients. Methods: A 1-year inception cohort study in 28 intensive care units of patients (n = 1,531) having a first episode of infection on admission or during the stay. Measurements and main results: The cumulative incidence of progression to severe sepsis or shock was 20% and 24% at Days 10 and 30, respectively. Variables independently associated (hazard ratio [HR]) with worsening sepsis included: temperature higher than 38.2°C (1.6), heart rate greater than 120/minute (1.3), systolic blood pressure higher than 110 mm Hg (1.5), platelets higher than 150 × 109/L (1.5), serum sodium higher than 145 mmol/L (1.5), bilirubin higher than 30 μmol/L (1.3), mechanical ventilation (1.5), and five variables characterizing infection (pneumonia [HR 1.5], peritonitis [1.5], primary bacteremia [1.8], and infection with gram-positive cocci [1.3] or aerobic gram-negative bacilli [1.4]). The 12 weighted variables were included in a score (Risk of Infection to Severe Sepsis and Shock Score, range 0–49), summarized in four classes of “low” (score 0–8) and “moderate” (8.5–16) risk (9% and 17% probability of worsening, respectively), and of “high” (16.5–24) and “very high” (score > 24) risk (31% and 55% probability, respectively). Conclusions: One of four patients presenting with infection/sepsis worsen to severe sepsis or shock. A score estimating this risk, using objectively defined criteria for systemic inflammatory response syndrome, could be used by physicians to stratify patients for clinical management and to test new interventions.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Internal validation of predictive modelsJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 2001
- Prevalence of infections in intensive care units in Mexico: A multicenter studyCritical Care Medicine, 2000
- A Proportional Hazards Model for the Subdistribution of a Competing RiskJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1999
- Epidemiology of Sepsis Syndrome in 8 Academic Medical CentersSurvey of Anesthesiology, 1998
- The Dynamics of Disease Progression in Sepsis: Markov Modeling Describing the Natural History and the Likely Impact of Effective Antisepsis AgentsClinical Infectious Diseases, 1998
- The Italian SEPSIS study: Preliminary results on the incidence and evolution of SIRS, sepsis, severe sepsis and septic shockIntensive Care Medicine, 1995
- Systemic inflammatory response syndrome, sepsis, severe sepsis and septic shock: Incidence, morbidities and outcomes in surgical ICU patientsIntensive Care Medicine, 1995
- Round table conference on clinical trials for the treatment of sepsisCritical Care Medicine, 1995
- Importance of pre-existing co-morbidities for prognosis of septicemia in critically ill patientsIntensive Care Medicine, 1993
- CDC definitions for nosocomial infections, 1988American Journal of Infection Control, 1988