Literature DB >> 32148931

Sepsis trends: increasing incidence and decreasing mortality, or changing denominator?

Chanu Rhee1,2, Michael Klompas1,2.   

Abstract

Numerous studies suggest that the incidence of sepsis has been steadily increasing over the past several decades while mortality rates are falling. However, reliably assessing trends in sepsis epidemiology is challenging due to changing diagnosis and coding practices over time. Ongoing efforts by clinicians, administrators, policy makers, and patient advocates to increase sepsis awareness, screening, and recognition are leading to more patients being labeled with sepsis. Subjective clinical definitions and heterogeneous presentations also allow for wide discretion in diagnosing sepsis rather than specific infections alone or non-specific syndromes. These factors create a potential ascertainment bias whereby the inclusion of less severely ill patients in sepsis case counts over time leads to a perceived increase in sepsis incidence and decrease in sepsis mortality rates. Analyses that rely on administrative data alone are further confounded by changing coding practices in response to new policies, financial incentives, and efforts to improve documentation. An alternate strategy for measuring sepsis incidence, outcomes, and trends is to use objective and consistent clinical criteria rather than administrative codes or registries to identify sepsis. This is feasible using data routinely found in electronic health record systems, such as blood culture draws and sustained courses of antibiotics to identify infection and laboratory values, vasopressors, and mechanical ventilation to measure acute organ dysfunction. Recent surveillance studies using this approach suggest that sepsis incidence and mortality rates have been essentially stable over the past decade. In this review, we summarize the major epidemiologic studies of sepsis trends, potential biases in these analyses, and the recent change in the surveillance paradigm toward using objective clinical data from electronic health records to more accurately characterize sepsis trends. 2020 Journal of Thoracic Disease. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Sepsis; incidence; surveillance; trends

Year:  2020        PMID: 32148931      PMCID: PMC7024753          DOI: 10.21037/jtd.2019.12.51

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Thorac Dis        ISSN: 2072-1439            Impact factor:   2.895


  58 in total

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Authors:  R C Bone
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  1991-07       Impact factor: 7.598

3.  Application of a Framework to Assess the Usefulness of Alternative Sepsis Criteria.

Authors:  Christopher W Seymour; Craig M Coopersmith; Clifford S Deutschman; Foster Gesten; Michael Klompas; Mitchell Levy; Gregory S Martin; Tiffany M Osborn; Chanu Rhee; David K Warren; R Scott Watson; Derek C Angus
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4.  Surviving Sepsis Campaign: association between performance metrics and outcomes in a 7.5-year study.

Authors:  Mitchell M Levy; Andrew Rhodes; Gary S Phillips; Sean R Townsend; Christa A Schorr; Richard Beale; Tiffany Osborn; Stanley Lemeshow; Jean-Daniel Chiche; Antonio Artigas; R Phillip Dellinger
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2015-01       Impact factor: 7.598

Review 5.  Using objective clinical data to track progress on preventing and treating sepsis: CDC's new 'Adult Sepsis Event' surveillance strategy.

Authors:  Chanu Rhee; Raymund Barretto Dantes; Lauren Epstein; Michael Klompas
Journal:  BMJ Qual Saf       Date:  2018-09-25       Impact factor: 7.035

6.  Objective Sepsis Surveillance Using Electronic Clinical Data.

Authors:  Chanu Rhee; Sameer Kadri; Susan S Huang; Michael V Murphy; Lingling Li; Richard Platt; Michael Klompas
Journal:  Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol       Date:  2015-11-03       Impact factor: 3.254

7.  Epidemiology and recent trends of severe sepsis in Spain: a nationwide population-based analysis (2006-2011).

Authors:  Carmen Bouza; Teresa López-Cuadrado; Zuleika Saz-Parkinson; José María Amate-Blanco
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2014-12-21       Impact factor: 3.090

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Authors:  Michael Klompas; Chanu Rhee
Journal:  Crit Care       Date:  2016-11-21       Impact factor: 9.097

9.  Physician agreement on the diagnosis of sepsis in the intensive care unit: estimation of concordance and analysis of underlying factors in a multicenter cohort.

Authors:  Bert K Lopansri; Russell R Miller Iii; John P Burke; Mitchell Levy; Steven Opal; Richard E Rothman; Franco R D'Alessio; Venkataramana K Sidhaye; Robert Balk; Jared A Greenberg; Mark Yoder; Gourang P Patel; Emily Gilbert; Majid Afshar; Jorge P Parada; Greg S Martin; Annette M Esper; Jordan A Kempker; Mangala Narasimhan; Adey Tsegaye; Stella Hahn; Paul Mayo; Leo McHugh; Antony Rapisarda; Dayle Sampson; Roslyn A Brandon; Therese A Seldon; Thomas D Yager; Richard B Brandon
Journal:  J Intensive Care       Date:  2019-02-21

10.  Quantifying the improvement in sepsis diagnosis, documentation, and coding: the marginal causal effect of year of hospitalization on sepsis diagnosis.

Authors:  S Reza Jafarzadeh; Benjamin S Thomas; Jonas Marschall; Victoria J Fraser; Jeff Gill; David K Warren
Journal:  Ann Epidemiol       Date:  2015-10-28       Impact factor: 3.797

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2.  The Impact of Principal Diagnosis on Readmission Risk among Patients Hospitalized for Community-Acquired Pneumonia.

Authors:  Gregory W Ruhnke; Peter K Lindenauer; Christopher S Lyttle; David O Meltzer
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4.  Age-related incidence and outcomes of sepsis in California, 2008-2015.

Authors:  Gabriel Wardi; Christopher R Tainter; Venktesh R Ramnath; Jesse J Brennan; Vaishal Tolia; Edward M Castillo; Renee Y Hsia; Atul Malhotra; Ulrich Schmidt; Angela Meier
Journal:  J Crit Care       Date:  2020-12-23       Impact factor: 3.425

5.  lncRNA Neat1 regulates neuronal dysfunction post-sepsis via stabilization of hemoglobin subunit beta.

Authors:  Yan Wu; Pengfei Li; Liu Liu; Andrew J Goodwin; Perry V Halushka; Tetsuro Hirose; Shinichi Nakagawa; Jiliang Zhou; Meng Liu; Hongkuan Fan
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6.  Leveraging electronic health record data to improve sepsis surveillance.

Authors:  Claire N Shappell; Chanu Rhee
Journal:  BMJ Qual Saf       Date:  2020-02-27       Impact factor: 7.418

7.  Prevalence and Outcomes of Previously Healthy Adults Among Patients Hospitalized With Community-Onset Sepsis.

Authors:  Mohammad Alrawashdeh; Michael Klompas; Steven Q Simpson; Sameer S Kadri; Russell Poland; Jeffrey S Guy; Jonathan B Perlin; Chanu Rhee
Journal:  Chest       Date:  2022-01-20       Impact factor: 10.262

8.  Tumor necrosis factor-α small interfering RNA alveolar epithelial cell-targeting nanoparticles reduce lung injury in C57BL/6J mice with sepsis.

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9.  Assessment of a Cellular Host Response Test as a Sepsis Diagnostic for Those With Suspected Infection in the Emergency Department.

Authors:  Hollis R O'Neal; Roya Sheybani; Terrell S Caffery; Mandi W Musso; Diana Hamer; Shannon M Alwood; Matthew S Berlinger; Tonya Jagneaux; Katherine W LaVie; Catherine S O'Neal; Michael A Sanchez; Morgan K Walker; Ajay M Shah; Henry T K Tse; Christopher B Thomas
Journal:  Crit Care Explor       Date:  2021-06-15

Review 10.  Surveillance Strategies for Tracking Sepsis Incidence and Outcomes.

Authors:  Claire N Shappell; Michael Klompas; Chanu Rhee
Journal:  J Infect Dis       Date:  2020-07-21       Impact factor: 7.759

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