Likelihood of infection in patients with presumed sepsis at the time of intensive care unit admission: a cohort study
Critical
Care 2015, 19:319
Klein
Klouwenberg, PMC et al
Introduction:
A clinical suspicion of infection is mandatory for diagnosing sepsis in
patients with a systemic inflammatory response syndrome. Yet, the accuracy of
categorizing critically ill patients presenting to the intensive care unit
(ICU) as being infected or not is unknown. We therefore assessed the likelihood
of infection in patients who were treated for sepsis upon admission to the ICU,
and quantified the association between plausibility of infection and mortality.
Methods: We studied a cohort of critically ill patients admitted with
clinically suspected sepsis to two tertiary ICUs in the Netherlands between
January 2011 and December 2013. The likelihood of infection was categorized as
none, possible, probable or definite by post-hoc assessment. We used
multivariable competing risks survival analyses to determine the association of
the plausibility of infection with mortality.
Results: Among 2579 patients treated for sepsis, 13% had a post-hoc infection
likelihood of “none”, and an additional 30% of only “possible”. These
percentages were largely similar for different suspected sites of infection. In
crude analyses, the likelihood of infection was associated with increased
length of stay and complications. In multivariable analysis, patients with an
unlikely infection had a higher mortality rate compared to patients with a
definite infection (subdistribution hazard ratio 1.23; 95% confidence interval
1.03-1.49).
Conclusions: This study is the first prospective analysis to show that the
clinical diagnosis of sepsis upon ICU admission corresponds poorly with the presence
of infection on post-hoc assessment. A higher likelihood of infection does not
adversely influence outcome in this population.
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