| Literature DB >> 27075205 |
Manu Shankar-Hari1,2, Michael Ambler3, Viyaasan Mahalingasivam3, Andrew Jones3,4, Kathryn Rowan5, Gordon D Rubenfeld6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In addition to acute hospital mortality, sepsis is associated with higher risk of death following hospital discharge. We assessed the strength of epidemiological evidence supporting a causal link between sepsis and mortality after hospital discharge by systematically evaluating the available literature for strength of association, bias, and techniques to address confounding.Entities:
Keywords: Bias; Causality; Confounding factors (epidemiology); Mortality; Sepsis
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27075205 PMCID: PMC4831092 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1276-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Approach to the study question. Post-acute mortality was estimated as the difference between one-year mortality and acute mortality, to address the study questions as described (see “Methods”, “Approach”). We assessed whether the studies used cumulative mortality or post-acute mortality in regression models. This was done to identify risk factors that are associated with post-acute mortality, which will help future researchers delineate modifiable risk factors. This approach helps to generate a summary estimate of post-acute mortality and also explores the relationship between acute mortality and post-acute mortality at cohort level
Fig. 2Flow diagram showing the literature search and results. #Non-duplicate articles were identified from the references list of two review articles [9, 10]. QOL quality of life. A/c refers to acute
Assessment of study quality, risk of bias, and confounding
| Methodological assessment summary (N=59 studies) | %* |
|---|---|
| 1. Exposure definition (sepsis) | |
| i) Consensus [ | 49 % |
| ii) Claims/ICD codes [ | 14 % |
| iii) Pathogen-plus (either positive blood culture or pathogen specified) [ | 20 % |
| iv) Pneumonia [ | 15 % |
| v) Peritonitis [ | 5 % |
| 2. Ascertainment of exposure | |
| i) Claims/ICD codes data | 13 % |
| ii) Randomized controlled trial cohorts [ | 10 % |
| iii) Non-interventional study cohorts | 75 % |
| 3. Selection of the control cohort | |
| i) Drawn from ICU patients without sepsis | |
| a. Matched [ | 2 % |
| b. Not matched [ | 12 % |
| ii) Drawn from hospitalized infected patients (not ICU) | |
| a. Matched | |
| b. Not matched [ | 3 % |
| iii) Drawn from hospitalized non-infected patients (not ICU) | |
| a. Matched [ | 2 % |
| b. Not matched [ | 10 % |
| iv) Population controls | |
| a. Matched [ | 10 % |
| b. Not matched [ | 3 % |
| v) No control cohorts/no controls for mortality comparison | 73 % |
| 4. Comparability of cohorts on the basis of design or analysis | |
| i) Regression models to adjust for confounders | |
| a. Regression models in studies reporting control population | |
| - Post-acute mortality [ | 16 % |
| - Cumulative mortality | |
| - Stratified analysis for post-acute mortality [ | 5 % |
| - Non-mortality outcome models [ | 5 % |
| b. Regression models using in studies with no controls | |
| - Post-acute mortality | 22 % |
| - Cumulative mortality | 20 % |
| - No mortality model | 31 % |
| ii) Studies reporting sepsis dose-response [ | 9 % |
| 5. Assessment of post-acute mortality | |
| i) Record linkage with national or regional databases or outcome assessed by contact with patient or relatives | 90 % |
| ii) No description | 10 % |
| 6. Adequacy of follow up | |
| i) Complete follow up, all participants accounted for | 22 % |
| ii) Loss to follow up unlikely to introduce bias (<20 % loss, or >20 % but those lost described and unlikely to be different from those followed) | 61 % |
| iii) Follow up <80 % and no description of those lost | 3 % |
| iv) No statement | 14 % |
| 7. Report both acute and post-acute mortality (or that information can be determined from the reported data) | |
| i) At one year | 72.9 % |
| ii) Between 2 and 10 years [ | 8.5 % |
| iii) No mortality data/post-acute mortality not estimable/follow-up time unclear [ | 10.2 % |
*Reported proportions (%) corrected to nearest whole number. Study quality and risk of bias was assessed on selection, comparability, and reported outcomes using the Newcastle Ottawa Score checklist (Additional file 1: Table S2). Sepsis case definition evaluates the representativeness of the cohort and ascertainment of exposure by assessing concordance with the sepsis definitions to the definition of Bone et al. [19] or Levy et al. [20]. Studies reporting data from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are likely to have a lower score as non-sepsis controls are not evaluated
Fig. 3Random effect meta-analysis of post-acute mortality. First author, reference number and cohort recruitment year for each study are shown. X axis indicates mortality proportions. NR not reported, Recruitment Year refers to recruitment window reported in studies
Fig. 4a One-sided contour-enhanced funnel (confunnel) plot. The figure either implies potential publication bias or consistency in results (implying causality) across the published studies identified by this systematic review. The confunnel plot adds contours of statistical significance to the standard funnel plot and assesses whether the areas where studies are potentially missing correspond to areas of low statistical significance, the assumption being that studies that do not attain statistical significance boundaries are less likely to be published. b Post-acute mortality versus acute mortality with linear fit superimposed and assessed between study dose-response effects. The equation, R-square statistics of the fit, the sample size and root mean square standard error (RMSE)(s) are also shown (referred to as aaplot and designed by Nicholas J. Cox)
Fig. 5Additional post-acute hazard with sepsis. To illustrate the differences in additional hazard with sepsis, all four sub-graphs were generated with the same scale on the x axis. Dashed line at hazard ratio 1 is the reference line; shaded area shows the range between 0 and 1. If the same study reported risk-adjusted and unadjusted hazard ratios, these are presented together to highlight confounding. If only proportions are reported, they are presented as dots. Confidence intervals of hazard ratios are shown when reported in studies. a Additional hazard when compared to general population controls. b Additional hazard when compared to hospitalized controls. Hazard ratios associated with single episode of pneumonia are reported for Yende S et al. [40]. c Additional hazard when compared to critically ill controls. d Confounding from studies reporting multiple controls. In Linder et al, the additional risk of sepsis compared to critically ill controls (Model-1) and cardiovascular system (CVS) surgical controls (Model-2) between 1 and 5 years [37]. In Ghelani et al, the additional risk of sepsis compared to critically ill controls (Model-1) and hospital infected controls (Model-2) [30]. In all the graphs, the hazard ratios are either reported by the study or estimated by comparing the sepsis outcomes to reported control populations. HAI healthcare-associated infection, SMR standardized mortality ratio, HR @ 2 yrs refers to hazard ratio at 2 years, Model-1, Model-2 different risk-adjusted models reported in studies. Additional details are provided in Additional file 1: Table S6