Literature DB >> 32691830

Surveillance Strategies for Tracking Sepsis Incidence and Outcomes.

Claire N Shappell1,2, Michael Klompas1,3, Chanu Rhee1,3.   

Abstract

Sepsis is a leading cause of death and the target of intense efforts to improve recognition, management and outcomes. Accurate sepsis surveillance is essential to properly interpreting the impact of quality improvement initiatives, making meaningful comparisons across hospitals and geographic regions, and guiding future research and resource investments. However, it is challenging to reliably track sepsis incidence and outcomes because sepsis is a heterogeneous clinical syndrome without a pathologic reference standard, allowing for subjectivity and broad discretion in assigning diagnoses. Most epidemiologic studies of sepsis to date have used hospital discharge codes and have suggested dramatic increases in sepsis incidence and decreases in mortality rates over time. However, diagnosis and coding practices vary widely between hospitals and are changing over time, complicating the interpretation of absolute rates and trends. Other surveillance approaches include death records, prospective clinical registries, retrospective medical record reviews, and analyses of the usual care arms of randomized controlled trials. Each of these strategies, however, has substantial limitations. Recently, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released an "Adult Sepsis Event" definition that uses objective clinical indicators of infection and organ dysfunction that can be extracted from most hospitals' electronic health record systems. Emerging data suggest that electronic health record-based clinical surveillance, such as surveillance of Adult Sepsis Event, is accurate, can be applied uniformly across diverse hospitals, and generates more credible estimates of sepsis trends than administrative data. In this review, we discuss the advantages and limitations of different sepsis surveillance strategies and consider future directions.
© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adult Sepsis Event; epidemiology; sepsis; surveillance; trends

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32691830      PMCID: PMC9011360          DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jiaa102

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Infect Dis        ISSN: 0022-1899            Impact factor:   7.759


  62 in total

1.  Defining Sepsis Mortality Clusters in the United States.

Authors:  Justin Xavier Moore; John P Donnelly; Russell Griffin; George Howard; Monika M Safford; Henry E Wang
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2016-07       Impact factor: 7.598

2.  Glasgow Coma Scale Scoring is Often Inaccurate.

Authors:  Bryan E Bledsoe; Michael J Casey; Jay Feldman; Larry Johnson; Scott Diel; Wes Forred; Codee Gorman
Journal:  Prehosp Disaster Med       Date:  2014-12-09       Impact factor: 2.040

3.  Mortality related to severe sepsis and septic shock among critically ill patients in Australia and New Zealand, 2000-2012.

Authors:  Kirsi-Maija Kaukonen; Michael Bailey; Satoshi Suzuki; David Pilcher; Rinaldo Bellomo
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2014-04-02       Impact factor: 56.272

4.  Association of diagnostic coding with trends in hospitalizations and mortality of patients with pneumonia, 2003-2009.

Authors:  Peter K Lindenauer; Tara Lagu; Meng-Shiou Shieh; Penelope S Pekow; Michael B Rothberg
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2012-04-04       Impact factor: 56.272

5.  Examination of Cause-of-Death Data Quality Among New York City Deaths Due to Cancer, Pneumonia, or Diabetes From 2010 to 2014.

Authors:  Laura Falci; Erica J Lee Argov; Gretchen Van Wye; Madia Plitt; Antonio Soto; Mary Huynh
Journal:  Am J Epidemiol       Date:  2018-01-01       Impact factor: 4.897

6.  Severe sepsis cohorts derived from claims-based strategies appear to be biased toward a more severely ill patient population.

Authors:  Stacey-Ann Whittaker; Mark E Mikkelsen; David F Gaieski; Sherine Koshy; Craig Kean; Barry D Fuchs
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2013-04       Impact factor: 7.598

7.  National variation in United States sepsis mortality: a descriptive study.

Authors:  Henry E Wang; Randolph S Devereaux; Donald M Yealy; Monika M Safford; George Howard
Journal:  Int J Health Geogr       Date:  2010-02-15       Impact factor: 3.918

8.  Risk Adjustment for Sepsis Mortality to Facilitate Hospital Comparisons Using Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Adult Sepsis Event Criteria and Routine Electronic Clinical Data.

Authors:  Chanu Rhee; Rui Wang; Yue Song; Zilu Zhang; Sameer S Kadri; Edward J Septimus; David Fram; Robert Jin; Russell E Poland; Jason Hickok; Kenneth Sands; Michael Klompas
Journal:  Crit Care Explor       Date:  2019-10-14

9.  Comparison of Automated Sepsis Identification Methods and Electronic Health Record-based Sepsis Phenotyping: Improving Case Identification Accuracy by Accounting for Confounding Comorbid Conditions.

Authors:  Katharine E Henry; David N Hager; Tiffany M Osborn; Albert W Wu; Suchi Saria
Journal:  Crit Care Explor       Date:  2019-10-30

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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  3 in total

Review 1.  Sarcopenia and Mortality Risk of Patients with Sepsis: A Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Wei Liu; Chenghuan Hu; Shuangping Zhao
Journal:  Int J Clin Pract       Date:  2022-01-31       Impact factor: 3.149

2.  Mid-German Sepsis Cohort (MSC): a prospective observational study of sepsis survivorship.

Authors:  Carolin Fleischmann-Struzek; Miriam Kesselmeier; Dominique Ouart; Christiane S Hartog; Michael Bauer; Sven Bercker; Michael Bucher; Andreas Meier-Hellmann; Sirak Petros; Torsten Schreiber; Philipp Simon; Lorenz Weidhase; Sebastian Born; Anke Braune; Hicham Chkirni; Cornelia Eichhorn; Sandra Fiedler; Christin Gampe; Christian König; Stephanie Platzer; Heike Romeike; Kristin Töpfer; Konrad Reinhart; André Scherag
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2021-03-17       Impact factor: 2.692

3.  Association Between Implementation of the Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock Early Management Bundle Performance Measure and Outcomes in Patients With Suspected Sepsis in US Hospitals.

Authors:  Chanu Rhee; Tingting Yu; Rui Wang; Sameer S Kadri; David Fram; Huai-Chun Chen; Michael Klompas
Journal:  JAMA Netw Open       Date:  2021-12-01
  3 in total

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