| Literature DB >> 27048508 |
Chanu Rhee1,2, Sameer S Kadri3, Robert L Danner3, Anthony F Suffredini3, Anthony F Massaro4, Barrett T Kitch5, Grace Lee6, Michael Klompas6,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sepsis is the focus of national quality improvement programs and a recent public reporting measure from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. However, diagnosing sepsis requires interpreting nonspecific signs and can therefore be subjective. We sought to quantify interobserver variability in diagnosing sepsis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27048508 PMCID: PMC4822273 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1266-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Survey respondent characteristics (N = 94 respondents)
| Respondent profile | Data |
|---|---|
| Subspecialties, | |
| Critical care | 83 (88.3 %) |
| Pulmonary | 37 (39.4 %) |
| Anesthesia | 18 (19.1 %) |
| Surgery | 8 (8.5 %) |
| Emergency medicine | 8 (8.5 %) |
| Infectious diseases | 4 (4.3 %) |
| Academic hospital (versus community hospital), | 85 (90.4 %) |
| Region, | |
| Northeastern United States | 62 (66.0 %) |
| Midwestern United States | 13 (13.8 %) |
| Southern United States | 8 (8.5 %) |
| Western United States | 10 (10.6 %) |
| Non-U.S. country | 1 (1.1 %) |
| Median years in practice (IQR) | 8 (3–15) |
| Median percentage of time doing clinical work (IQR) | 50 (25–80) |
| Median percentage of clinical time spent in ICU (IQR) | 50 (30–90) |
| Median number of ICU patients cared for each month (IQR) | 40 (20–55) |
ICU intensive care unit, IQR interquartile range
Fig. 1Distribution of responses for each case for (a) five-level classifications (systemic inflammatory response syndrome, sepsis, severe sepsis, septic shock, or none) and (b) dichotomized classification (severe sepsis/septic shock or not). SIRS systemic inflammatory response syndrome
Fig. 2Level of confidence in sepsis diagnoses for each case
Fig. 3Qualitative assessment of case vignettes’ realism and representativeness of actual patients
Summary of explanations for why cases were not diagnosed as severe sepsis/septic shock
| No infection or organ dysfunction | Infection but organ dysfunction not present or not severe enough to qualify | Organ dysfunction but no infection | Infection and organ dysfunction, but not attributable to infection | Misclassifieda | No explanation given | Representative quotes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case A (pneumonia, heart failure, respiratory failure, and shock) | 0 | 0 | 23 | 16 | 0 | 9 | “Sounds like cardiogenic shock. Although heart rate and white blood cell count would meet SIRS criteria, this does not appear to be inflammatory in etiology. The mixed organisms are unconvincing for a true infection.” |
| Case B (pyelonephritis, acute kidney injury) | 0 | 36 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 10 | “SIRS (3/4 – temperature, heart rate, and white blood cell count) plus documented infection so sepsis. Although she had some degree of renal dysfunction, it resolved with fluids and antibiotics, so I would not classify her as severe sepsis.” |
| Case C (colitis, hypotension) | 8 | 22 | 4 | 11 | 1 | 14 | “She’s tachycardic, has low grade fever, hypotension, mild acute kidney injury, and CT evidence of colitis, so this seems related to infection, but she gets better with fluids and antibiotics quickly, with a high normal lactate that normalized rapidly, so no shock.” |
| Case D (COPD exacerbation, respiratory failure) | 9 | 26 | 5 | 9 | 0 | 16 | “COPD exacerbation with suspected source of infection, but no hypotension or lactate elevation.” |
COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, CT computed tomography, SIRS systemic inflammatory response syndrome
a “Misclassified” refers to case that was not labeled as severe sepsis/septic shock but explanation was indicative of severe sepsis