| Literature DB >> 32373434 |
Klaus-Friedrich Bodmann1, Rainer Höhl2, Wolfgang Krüger3, Beatrice Grabein4, Wolfgang Graninger5.
Abstract
This is the eleventh chapter of the guideline "Calculated initial parenteral treatment of bacterial infections in adults - update 2018" in the 2nd updated version. The German guideline by the Paul-Ehrlich-Gesellschaft für Chemotherapie e.V. (PEG) has been translated to address an international audience. Sepsis, defined as a life threatening organ dysfunction caused by a misregulated host response to an infection, is the third leading cause of death in Germany with a lethality rate of 30% to over 50%. An early, effective antimicrobial therapy is, next to infectious source control, the most important causal treatment option. It should be complemented by the mainly supportive measures of general intensive care therapy. Prior antimicrobial therapy, the patient's medical history (e.g. risk factors for multiresistant agents) and small-scale epidemiology are to be considered as part of the therapeutic and practical decisions. A modification of the often needed broad initial calculated combination therapy is desirable. In the future, prompt measurements of plasma concentrations of antiinfectives, especially for the sepsis patient with diverse and partly conflicting pathophysiological changes, will have great importance regarding efficacy, toxicity and resistance development. In order to apply those complex strategies in clinical routine, there is a requirement for a strong interdisciplinary collaboration between the intensive care unit, clinical infectiology, microbiology, and clinical pharmacology, ideally in the framework of a functional antimicrobial stewardship program.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32373434 PMCID: PMC7186805 DOI: 10.3205/id000053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: GMS Infect Dis ISSN: 2195-8831
Figure 1Flowchart to identify patients with sepsis and septic shock
Table 1Recommendations for the treatment of sepsis with unknown pathogen. (Treatment recommendations are not intended for immunosuppressed and neutropenic patients.)
Table 2Recommendations for antibiotic treatment of sepsis where the pathogen is known
Table 3Recommendation grade for the use of antibiotics in the indication “nosocomial acquired sepsis with unknown pathogen and unknown site of infection”