| Literature DB >> 28729906 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sepsis is one of the leading causes of mortality among children worldwide. Unfortunately, however, reliable evidence was insufficient in pediatric sepsis and many aspects in clinical practice actually depend on expert consensus and some evidence in adult sepsis. More recent findings have given us deep insights into pediatric sepsis since the publication of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines 2012. MAIN TEXT: New knowledge was added regarding the hemodynamic management and the timely use of antimicrobials. Quality improvement initiatives of pediatric "sepsis bundles" were reported to be successful in clinical outcomes by several centers. Moreover, a recently published global epidemiologic study (the SPROUT study) did not only reveal the demographics, therapeutic interventions, and prognostic outcomes but also elucidated the inappropriateness of the current definition of pediatric sepsis.Entities:
Keywords: Algorithm; Antibiotics; Child; Epidemiology; Hemodynamic management; Pediatric; Prognosis; Sepsis; Septic shock; Surviving Sepsis Campaign
Year: 2017 PMID: 28729906 PMCID: PMC5518149 DOI: 10.1186/s40560-017-0240-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intensive Care ISSN: 2052-0492
Epidemiology of pediatric sepsis in multicenter studies in developed countries since 2003
| Authors, year | Country | Design | Settings | Age | Incidence/prevalence | Mortality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Watson et al. 2003 [ | USA | Retrospective | ICD-9a coding & modified Angus criteria | ≤19 years | Incidence 0.56 per 1000 population (1995) | Hospital 10.3% |
| Hartman et al. 2013 [ | USA | Retrospective | ICD-9a coding & modified Angus criteria | ≤19 years | Incidence 0.89 per 1000 population (2005) | Hospital 8.9% (2005) |
| Ruth et al. 2014 [ | USA | Retrospective | ICD-9a coding & modified Angus criteria | ≤18 years | Prevalence | Hospital 14.4%; |
| Wolfler et at. 2008 [ | Italia | Prospective | Proulx’s criteriac
| ≤16 years | Incidence | ICU |
| Shime et al. 2011 [ | Japan | Prospective | Severe sepsis | ≤15 years | Prevalence 1.4% | 28-day 18.9% |
| Schlapbach et al. 2015 [ | Australia/New Zealand | Retrospective | Invasive infection, sepsis, septic shock | <16 years | Prevalence | ICU |
| Weiss et al. 2015 (SPROUT) [ | 26 countries worldwide | Point prevalence | Severe sepsis | <18 years | Prevalence 8.2% |
eICU 23% |
a ICD-9 International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision
b PHIS Pediatric Health Information Systems
cProulx’s definition of septic shock was different from Goldstein’s definition, now common in the world. Briefly, Proulx’s septic shock necessitated hypotension despite 20 mls/kg of fluid administration, while Goldstein’s septic shock is defined as inadequate perfusion, regardless of blood pressure, after 40 mls/kg of fluid resuscitation
d ANZPIC Australian and New Zealand Paediatric Intensive Care
eThese mortality rates were only for the sites in the developed world
Fig. 1Time from sepsis recognition to initial antimicrobial administration with survival fraction. The shaded portion of each bar indicates the number of non-survivors in each time interval. Cited from reference [26]. (Promotional and commercial use of the material in print, digital, or mobile device format is prohibited without the permission from the publisher Wolters Kluwer. Please contact healthpermissions@wolterskluwer.com for further information.)
Fig. 2The American College of Critical Care Medicine-Pediatric Advanced Life Support (ACCM-PALS) algorithm. This algorithm aims at time sensitive, goal-directed stepwise management of hemodynamic support in infants and children, supported by the Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines 2012. Cited from reference [3]. (Promotional and commercial use of the material in print, digital or mobile device format is prohibited without the permission from the publisher Wolters Kluwer. Please contact healthpermissions@wolterskluwer.com for further information.)
The summary of the newly added findings on the management of pediatric sepsis
| # Administer the first appropriate antimicrobials within 3 h after the recognition | |
| # Lactate clearance might be promising for children with elevated lactate level | |
| # Transthoracic echocardiography should be encouraged to use for the evaluation of the hemodynamics and treatment response | |
| # Dynamic variables would be more preferable to static variables to evaluate fluid responsiveness, but the only reliable parameter is respiratory variation in aortic blood flow peak velocity (ΔVpeak) measured with echocardiography so far | |
| # Adrenaline would be more preferable to dopamine for the first line catecholamine in children with fluid-refractory septic shock | |
| # Serial meticulous evaluation of the hemodynamics and adjustment of the management are essential | |
| # Be more cautious about the use of vasopressin/terlipressin for children with fluid-refractory septic shock | |
| # Be more “conservative” than ever about the administration of corticosteroids |