Sex differences in sepsis outcomes across the lifespan: a
population-based cohort study in Germany
Critical Care volume 29,
Article number: 408 (2025) Published: 26 September 2025
Importance
Sepsis is a major global health concern influenced by both
biological sex and socially constructed gender roles, which can affect disease
susceptibility, progression, treatment and outcomes. Evidence on sex-specific
differences in sepsis often lacks age-specific analysis, despite known
interactions between sex, age, and immune function.
Objective
We aimed to investigate age-dependent associations between
sex and mortality as well as long-term outcomes among sepsis survivors after
hospitalization.
Design, setting, and participants
This retrospective, population-based cohort study based on
nationwide health claims data from 2009 to 2017 of 23.0 million
beneficiaries of a large German health insurance provider. Patients aged 15
years and older with incident hospital-treated sepsis identified by ICD-10-GM
codes in 2013 to 2014 were included.
Exposures
Female and male sex.
Main outcomes and measures
Differences in 12-months mortality, medical, psychological
and cognitive diagnoses, as well as dependency on nursing care by sex and age
were analyzed using generalized additive models including sex*age interaction
effects. We report average marginal effects (AME) for sex and age as estimates
of the adjusted marginal increase or decrease of the event rate of outcomes.
Results
We included 159,684 sepsis patients in 2013/2014, of which
75,809 (47.5%) were female and 83,875 (52.5%) were male. The average marginal
hospital and 12-months mortality over the observed age distribution was AME = −
2.8% (95% CI, − 3.2%, − 2.3%, P < .001) and AME = − 5.4% (95% CI, − 5.9%, − 4.9%, P < .001) lower in females,
respectively. Significant female survival benefits were predominantly found
beyond age 44 (hospital mortality) and age 47 (12-months mortality). Females
were also less often affected by cognitive impairments, but more often experienced
psychological and physical impairments as well as nursing care dependency with
differential associations observable across the lifespan.
Conclusion and relevance
Sepsis long-term outcomes appear to be influenced by a
complex interaction between age and sex. While our study focuses on these
factors, it is important to acknowledge that observed associations cannot be
attributed to biological sex alone, as numerous additional factors - directly
or indirectly related to sex- may also contribute. These findings underscore
the importance of incorporating sex-specific considerations into sepsis care
and post-acute support strategies to improve long-term outcomes.
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