by Taylor, Stephanie Parks; Anderson, William E.; Beam,
Kent; Taylor, Brice; Ellerman, Justin; Kowalkowski, Marc A
Critical Care
Medicine: May 2021 -
Volume 49 - Issue 5 - p 741-747
OBJECTIVES:
Rapid delivery of antibiotics is a cornerstone of sepsis therapy,
although time targets for specific components of antibiotic delivery are
unknown. We quantified time intervals comprising the task of antibiotic
delivery and evaluated the association between interval delays and hospital
mortality among patients treated in the emergency department for
suspected sepsis.
DESIGN:
Retrospective cohort.
SETTING:
Twelve hospitals in Southeastern United States from 2014 to
2017.
PATIENTS:
Twenty-four thousand ninety-three encounters among 20,026
adults with suspected sepsis in 12 emergency departments.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN
RESULTS:
We divided antibiotic administration into two intervals:
time from emergency department triage to antibiotic order (recognition delay)
and time from antibiotic order to infusion (administration delay). We used
generalized linear mixed models to evaluate associations between these
intervals and hospital mortality. Median time from emergency department triage
to antibiotic administration was 3.4 hours (interquartile range, 2.0–6.0 hr),
separated into a median recognition delay (time from emergency department
triage to antibiotic order) of 2.7 hours(interquartile range, 1.5–4.7 hr) and
median administration delay (time from antibiotic order to infusion) of 0.6
hours (0.3–1.2 hr). Adjusting for other risk factors, both recognition delay
and administration delay were associated with mortality, but pairwise
comparison with a no-delay reference group was not significant for up to 6
hours of recognition delay or up to 1.5 hours of administration delay.
CONCLUSIONS:
Both recognition delays and administration delays were
associated with increased hospital mortality, but only for longer delays. These
results suggest that both metrics may be important to measure and improve for
patients with suspected sepsis but do not support targets less than 1
hour.
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