Articles: sepsis.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Distribution of Acute and Chronic Kidney Disease across Clinical Phenotypes for Sepsis.
Sepsis is the most common cause of acute kidney injury (AKI) in critically ill patients. Four phenotypes (α, β, γ, δ) for sepsis, which have different outcomes and responses to treatment, were described using routine clinical data in the electronic health record. ⋯ The rates of AKI and AKD differed across clinical sepsis phenotypes and are more common among patients with phenotypes β and δ. Phenotype β showed a higher level of underlying CKD that predisposed patients to new AKI. The α and γ phenotypes showed lower frequencies of AKI and less progression to AKD.
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Pediatr Crit Care Me · Sep 2024
Multicenter StudySocial Determinants of Health and Health-Related Quality of Life following Pediatric Septic Shock: Secondary Analysis of the Life After Pediatric Sepsis Evaluation Dataset, 2014-2017.
Social determinants of health (SDOH) are associated with disparities in disease severity and in-hospital outcomes among critically ill children. It is unknown whether SDOH are associated with later outcomes. We evaluated associations between SDOH measures and mortality, new functional morbidity, and health-related quality of life (HRQL) decline among children surviving septic shock. ⋯ In this secondary analysis of the 2014-2017 LAPSE dataset, we failed to identify any association between SDOH measures and in-hospital or postdischarge outcomes following pediatric septic shock. This finding may be reflective of the high illness severity and single disease (sepsis) of the cohort, with contribution of clinical factors to functional and HRQL outcomes predominating over prehospital and posthospital SDOH factors.
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Critical care medicine · Sep 2024
Multicenter Study Observational StudyThe Impact of Common Variations in Sequential Organ Failure Assessment Score Calculation on Sepsis Measurement Using Sepsis-3 Criteria: A Retrospective Analysis Using Electronic Health Record Data.
To assess the impact of different methods of calculating Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) scores using electronic health record data on the incidence, outcomes, agreement, and predictive validity of Sepsis-3 criteria. ⋯ Common variations in calculating respiratory and baseline SOFA scores, but not in handling missing data, lead to substantial differences in observed incidence, mortality, agreement, and predictive validity of Sepsis-3 criteria.
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Multicenter Study Observational Study
Afebrile status at the time of emergency department visit is associated with delayed antibiotic therapy in patients with sepsis (revised).
To determine whether there is a difference in antibiotic administration time and prognosis in afebrile sepsis patients compared to febrile sepsis patients. ⋯ Afebrile sepsis patients were associated with higher 28-day mortality compared to their febrile counterparts and were delayed in receiving antibiotics. This underscores the need for improved early detection and treatment strategies for the afebrile sepsis patients.
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Comment Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Continuous vs Intermittent β-Lactam Antibiotic Infusions in Critically Ill Patients With Sepsis: The BLING III Randomized Clinical Trial.
Whether β-lactam antibiotics administered by continuous compared with intermittent infusion reduces the risk of death in patients with sepsis is uncertain. ⋯ The observed difference in 90-day mortality between continuous vs intermittent infusions of β-lactam antibiotics did not meet statistical significance in the primary analysis. However, the confidence interval around the effect estimate includes the possibility of both no important effect and a clinically important benefit in the use of continuous infusions in this group of patients.