| Literature DB >> 23198133 |
Issrah Jawad1, Ivana Lukšić, Snorri Bjorn Rafnsson.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Sepsis is a complex and hard-to-define condition with many different interactions with other disorders. Presently, there are no estimates of the burden of sepsis and septicaemia at the global level and it was not included in the initial Global Burden of Disease study. Non-maternal sepsis has only recently received attention as a substantial global public health problem. The aim of this study was to assess available data on the burden of non-maternal sepsis, severe sepsis and septic shock in the community and to identify key gaps in information needed to estimate the global burden of sepsis.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23198133 PMCID: PMC3484761 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.02.010404
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Figure 1Natural history of sepsis diagram. Key to the diagram: 1) Potentially modifiable risk factors that increase the probability of infection, SIRS and sepsis in a non-diseased population or severe sepsis and septic shock in septic patients; 2) Incidence of sepsis: the rate at which susceptible or exposed individuals become newly affected by sepsis; 3) Remission: the rate at which individuals with sepsis stop being a sepsis case; 4) Sepsis-complication: the rate at which patients experience a complication of sepsis or start to suffer from sequelae of sepsis; 5) Case-fatality (or population mortality rate or relative risk of dying): the rate at which patients die from sepsis; 6) Complication-fatality: the rate at which patients die as a result of a complication of sepsis; 7) Individuals with sequelae who are exposed to the risk factor(s) and are susceptible to acquire infection, SIRS, sepsis, severe sepsis or septic shock again; 8) General mortality: the rate at which the population dies from any condition other than sepsis. Infection has been defined as a pathological process caused by invasion of normally sterile tissue/fluid/body cavity by pathogenic microorganisms; Systemic inflammatory response (SIRS) is a systemic inflammatory state characterized by changes in body temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate and leukocyte blood count; Sepsis is defined as confirmed or suspected infection and SIRS; Severe sepsis is defined as sepsis complicated by organ dysfunction; Septic shock in adults is defined as state of acute circulatory failure characterized by persistent arterial hypotension unexplained by other causes. Paediatric septic shock is defined as tachycardia with signs of decreased perfusion including decreased peripheral pulses, altered alertness, and cool extremities or reduced urinary output. Hypotension occurs later than in adults and is a sign of late and decompensated shock in children [3,4].
Clinical and epidemiological case definitions of the sepsis syndrome [3,4]
| Outcome | Definition | Clinical criteria* | Epidemiological criteria | Relevant ICD-9/10 codes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infection | Invasion of normally sterile tissue/fluid/ body cavity by microorganisms | Microbiologically confirmed or strongly suspected | ||
| Non-infective causes | Causes of SIRS that are not attributed to infectious agents | Clinically confirmed trauma, thermal injury, or sterile inflammatory processes | ||
| Systemic inflammatory response (SIRS) | Systemic activation of the innate immune response, regardless of cause | Two or more of the following: temperature >38°C or <36°C; heart rate >90 b/min; respiratory rate >20 b/min or Pa | ||
| Sepsis | Clinical syndrome defined by the presence of both infection and SIRS | Microbiologically confirmed or strongly suspected infection and two or more of the above (see SIRS clinical criteria; this definition does not reflect the heterogeneity of causes of SIRS/sepsis syndrome, including diverse non-infective causes) | ||
| Severe sepsis | Sepsis complicated by organ dysfunction | Sepsis and organ dysfunction, hypoperfusion or hypotension; hypoperfusion may include: lactic acidosis or oliguria or acute alteration in mental status | ||
| Septic shock | Circulatory failure characterized by arterial hypotension unexplained by other causes | Sepsis induced hypotension (systolic blood pressure <90 mm Hg or a reduction of ≥40 mm Hg from baseline) despite adequate fluid resuscitation |
Figure 2Results from the literature review of the global burden (incidence, prevalence and mortality/case-fatality) of sepsis.
Identified studies of the incidence, prevalence and mortality from sepsis
| Article | Country studied | Geographic setting | Population studied | Time setting and duration | Incidence as reported (prevalence only where indicated) | Mortality as reported |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Martin et al. [ | United States | Nationwide | 750 million hospitalizations in the United States, identified 10 319 418 cases of sepsis | 22-year period | 240.4 per 100 000 population | 17.9% (1995-2000) |
| Silva et al. [ | Brazil | Five mixed ICUs in two different regions of Brazil: Săo Paulo State and Santa Catarina State | The total number of enrolled patients was 1383 (81.9%) out of 1688 patients admitted to the ICUs of the participating centers. | 21 May 2001 – 31 January 2002 | ||
| Elhag et al. [ | Kuwait | Jabriya, Kuwait City – Mubarak AI-Kabeer Teaching Hospital | 3845 patients / 19 606 patients | 18 months (January 1982 – June 1983) | 10.9/1000 hospital admissions | |
| Flaatten et al. [ | Norway | Nationwide | All patients admitted to all Norwegian hospitals during 1999 | One year | 13.5% | |
| Hoa et al. [ | Vietnam | Ho Chi Minh City – southern Viet Nam. | All patients admitted to the hospital whose blood culture was positive | 1 June 1993 – 30 May 1994 | 20.4 episodes per 1000 admissions | 6.0% |
| Harrison et al. [ | United Kingdom | Nationwide | 343 860 admissions to 172 adult units | December 1995 – January 2005 | Severe sepsis: 66 hospital admissions per 100 000 population | |
| Angus et al. [ | USA | Florida, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Virginia and Washington. | All acute care hospitalizations with ICD-9-CM codes for both a bacterial or fungal infectious process | 1995 (12 months) | 3.0 cases per 1000 population | |
| Braun et al. [ | USA | Midwest, Northeast, Southeast, and Western United States | Enrollees in 16 IPA network plans | 1 July 1995 – 31 December 1999 | Severe sepsis: 0.91 cases of per 1000 enrollees | |
| Finfer et al. [ | Australia and New Zealand | Twenty-three closed multi-disciplinary ICUs of 21 hospitals (16 tertiary and 5 University affiliated) in Australia and New Zealand | Results are presented for 3543 ICU admissions in 3338 patients | 1999 – 2000 | 0.77 per 1000 population | |
| Engel et al. [ | Germany | Random sample of German hospitals in all 16 federal states of Germany and belonging to 310 hospitals | 1380 hospitals (total number of beds: 488727) | |||
| Salvo et al. [ | Italy | 99 Italian ICUs, distributed throughout the country | 1101 patients who fit criteria from all the ICUs | April 1993 – March 1994 | ||
| Watson et al. [ | USA | Florida, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Virginia and Washington | 942 non-federal hospital admissions under 19 y olds. | 1995 (12 months) |
ICU – intensive care unit, y – year