| Literature DB >> 34446092 |
Michael S Niederman1, Rebecca M Baron2, Lila Bouadma3, Thierry Calandra4, Nick Daneman5, Jan DeWaele6, Marin H Kollef7, Jeffrey Lipman8,9, Girish B Nair10.
Abstract
Sepsis is a common consequence of infection, associated with a mortality rate > 25%. Although community-acquired sepsis is more common, hospital-acquired infection is more lethal. The most common site of infection is the lung, followed by abdominal infection, catheter-associated blood steam infection and urinary tract infection. Gram-negative sepsis is more common than gram-positive infection, but sepsis can also be due to fungal and viral pathogens. To reduce mortality, it is necessary to give immediate, empiric, broad-spectrum therapy to those with severe sepsis and/or shock, but this approach can drive antimicrobial overuse and resistance and should be accompanied by a commitment to de-escalation and antimicrobial stewardship. Biomarkers such a procalcitonin can provide decision support for antibiotic use, and may identify patients with a low likelihood of infection, and in some settings, can guide duration of antibiotic therapy. Sepsis can involve drug-resistant pathogens, and this often necessitates consideration of newer antimicrobial agents.Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotic therapy; Antimicrobial therapy; Bacteremia; Biomarkers; Fungal infection; Intra-abdominal infection; Pharmacokinetics; Pneumonia; Sepsis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34446092 PMCID: PMC8390082 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-021-03736-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1The need for immediate broad-spectrum empiric antimicrobial therapy for selected patients with severe sepsis may be life-saving, but may also put pressure to overuse antibiotics and drive antibiotic resistance. Thus, this approach comes with the obligation to try to control resistance by de-escalating therapy once serial clinical, microbiologic and laboratory data become available. De-escalation can be in the form of shorter duration of therapy, less broad-spectrum agents, fewer drugs, or a combination of these interventions
Fig. 2The rapidity of empiric therapy and the choice of specific agents are determined by the clinical scenario of the patient with suspected sepsis. Immediate therapy is given to those with a high likelihood of infection, and severe illness and or shock. If biomarkers like procalcitonin are not elevated, and the patient is not severely ill, immediate therapy is not necessary, and some patients may not even have infection. Specific agents are chosen with a consideration of the most common site of infection (lung > abdomen > catheter-associated infection > urinary tract infection). Each site has a group of likely pathogens, but these can vary, depending on patient-specific risk factors for resistance, and local ICU patterns of drug-resistant organisms. In sepsis, gram-negatives are more common than gram-positive, but some patients may also have fungal infection
Summary and Key recommendations
| 1 | Sepsis mandates |
| 2 | Bacteria are the most common cause of sepsis, but viruses and fungi can also be responsible. Gram-negative organisms are more common than gram-positives, but many bacteria are |
| 3 | Use of |
| 4 | |
| 5 | Even with appropriate antibiotic therapy, it is |
| 6 | Empiric therapy for septic patients with pneumonia (CAP, HAP, VAP) |
| 7 | |
| 8 | Empiric therapy of bacteremia begins on a syndromic basis prior to the positive blood culture result, and then can be modified when gram stain and then pathogen identity are known. The latter window is becoming possible at earlier time points, due to the advent of rapid microbiologic testing. |
| 9 | Fungal infection accounts for 5% of sepsis, is most commonly due to |