| Literature DB >> 32591853 |
Robby Markwart1, Hiroki Saito2,3, Thomas Harder1, Sara Tomczyk1, Alessandro Cassini2, Carolin Fleischmann-Struzek4, Felix Reichert1,5,6, Tim Eckmanns1, Benedetta Allegranzi7.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Sepsis is recognized as a global public health problem, but the proportion due to hospital-acquired infections remains unclear. We aimed to summarize the epidemiological evidence related to the burden of hospital-acquired (HA) and ICU-acquired (ICU-A) sepsis.Entities:
Keywords: Healthcare-acquired infections; Hospital-acquired sepsis; ICU-acquired sepsis; Incidence; Sepsis
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32591853 PMCID: PMC7381455 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-020-06106-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Fig. 1Flow chart of study selection
Fig. 2Location and type of studies reporting hospital-acquired sepsis
Summary of studies reporting the incidence and prevalence of hospital-acquired sepsis
| Study setting | Sepsis type | Number of studies | Pooled estimate (95% CI) | Inter-study heterogeneity ( | Range of individual study estimates |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hospital patients | Hospital-acquired sepsis | 4 | 15.4 (9.2–25.7) | 7.4–29.5 | |
| Hospital-acquired sepsis with organ dysfunction | 5 | 9.3 (7.3–11.9) | 2–20.6 | ||
| Hospital-acquired septic shock | 1 | 1 | |||
| ICU patients | ICU-acquired sepsis | 7 | 44.8 (25.5–77.4) | 8–90.4 | |
| Hospital-acquired sepsis | 1 | 59.7 | |||
| ICU-acquired sepsis with organ dysfunction | 12 | 35.8 (19.1–66.3) | 5–373.2 | ||
| Hospital-acquired sepsis with organ dysfunction | 11 | 56.5 (35–90.2) | 9.2–254.4 | ||
| ICU-acquired septic shock | 2 | 20.3 (0.9–317.1) | 4.2–91.8 | ||
| Hospital-acquired septic shock | 1 | 23.2 | |||
| Neonates in NICUs | Hospital-acquired neonatal sepsis | 9 | 112.9 (64.2–191.1) | 18.4–368.2 | |
| Blood culture-proven hospital-acquired neonatal sepsis | 5 | 45.7 (26–79.2) | 20.5–75.6 | ||
| Hospital patients | – | 0 | |||
| ICU patients | ICU-acquired sepsis with organ dysfunction | 1 | 131.5 | ||
| Hospital-acquired sepsis with organ dysfunction | 1 | 181.6 | |||
| Neonates in NICUs | Hospital-acquired neonatal sepsis | 1 | 82 | ||
| Blood culture-proven hospital-acquired neonatal sepsis | 1 | 13.2 | |||
| Hospital patients | Hospital-acquired sepsis | 2 | 115.9 (33.2–404) | 61.2–219.3 | |
| Hospital-acquired sepsis with organ dysfunction | 1 | 16.8 | |||
| Hospital-acquired septic shock | 1 | 7.9 | |||
| ICU patients | ICU-acquired sepsis | 2 | 8.7 (4–18.9) | 5.8–12.7 | |
| Hospital-acquired sepsis | 1 | 1.3 | |||
| ICU-acquired sepsis with organ dysfunction | 1 | 46.6 | |||
| Hospital-acquired sepsis with organ dysfunction | 4 | 40.8 (14.3–116.9) | 13.8–175 | ||
| Neonates in NICUs | – | 0 | |||
The “sepsis” group comprises studies among patients with sepsis, sepsis with organ dysfunction and septic shock. The “sepsis with organ dysfunction” group comprises studies among patients with sepsis with organ dysfunction, and septic shock. 95% CI = 95% confidence interval
Fig. 3Pooled incidence of hospital-acquired sepsis per 1000 patients in different settings. a Pooled incidence of hospital-acquired sepsis, sepsis with organ dysfunction and septic shock among patients admitted to any ward in the hospital. b Pooled incidence of ICU-acquired and hospital-acquired sepsis, sepsis with organ dysfunction and septic shock among patients admitted to the ICU. The “sepsis” group comprises studies on patients with sepsis, sepsis with organ dysfunction and septic shock. The “sepsis with organ dysfunction” group comprises studies on patients with sepsis with organ dysfunction and septic shock. HA hospital-acquired, ICU-A ICU-acquired, 95% CI 95% confidence interval
Fig. 4Pooled proportions of hospital-acquired sepsis cases among all sepsis cases. a Pooled proportions of hospital-acquired sepsis, sepsis with organ dysfunction or septic shock among hospital patients (including ICU wards) with sepsis, sepsis with organ dysfunction or septic shock. b Pooled proportions of ICU-acquired and hospital-acquired sepsis, sepsis with organ dysfunction and septic shock among ICU patients with sepsis, sepsis with organ dysfunction or septic shock. The “sepsis” group comprises studies among patients with sepsis, sepsis with organ dysfunction and septic shock. The “sepsis with organ dysfunction” group comprises studies among patients with sepsis with organ dysfunction and septic shock. HA hospital-acquired, ICU-A = ICU-acquired; 95% CI = 95% confidence interval
Fig. 5Pooled estimates of hospital-acquired neonatal sepsis on NICUs. a Pooled incidence of hospital-acquired neonatal sepsis among neonates admitted to NICUs. b Pooled proportions of hospital-acquired neonatal sepsis among NICU patients with sepsis. HA hospital-acquired
| In ICUs worldwide, hospital-acquired sepsis is a frequent adverse outcome with high mortality (exceeding 40%) and increased length of stay. There is urgent need to improve the implementation of global and local infection prevention and control strategies to reduce the burden of healthcare-associated infections, as well as approaches for their early diagnosis and adequate treatment to prevent a progression to sepsis complications. |