An overview of positive cultures and clinical outcomes in septic patients: a sub-analysis of the Prehospital Antibiotics Against Sepsis (PHANTASi) trial
Critical Care 2019 23:182 - Published: 21 May 2019
Background
Sepsis
remains one of the most important causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide.
In approximately 30–50% of cases of suspected sepsis, no pathogen is isolated,
disabling the clinician to treat the patient with targeted antimicrobial therapy.
Studies investigating the differences in the patient outcomes between
culture-positive and culture-negative sepsis patients have only been conducted
in subgroups of sepsis patients and results are ambiguous.
Methods
This
is a sub-analysis of the PHANTASi (Prehospital Antibiotics Against Sepsis
trial), a randomized controlled trial that focused on the effect of prehospital
antibiotics in sepsis patients. We evaluated the outcome of cultures from
different sources and determined what the clinical implications of having a
positive culture compared to negative cultures were for patient outcomes.
Furthermore, we looked at the effect of antibiotics on culture outcomes.
Results
1133
patients (42.6%) with culture-positive sepsis were identified, compared to 1526
(56.4%) patients with culture-negative sepsis.
28-day
mortality (RR 1.43 [95% CI 1.11–1.83]) and 90-day mortality (RR 1.41 [95% CI
1.15–1.71]) were significantly higher in culture-positive patients compared to
culture-negative patients.
Culture-positive
sepsis was also associated with ≥ 3 organ systems affected during the sepsis
episode (RR 4.27 [95% CI 2.78–6.60]). Patients who received antibiotics at home
more often had negative blood cultures (85.9% vs. 78%) than those who did not (p < 0.001).
Conclusions
Our
results show that culture-positive sepsis is associated with a higher mortality
rate and culture-positive patients more often have multiple organ systems
affected during the sepsis episode.
Trial registration
The
PHANTASi trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01988428.
Date of registration: November 20, 2013.
No comments:
Post a Comment