Time to treatment and mortality for clinical sepsis subtypes
by Anne Yang, Jason
N. Kennedy, Katherine M. Reitz, Gary Phillips, Kathleen M. Terry, Mitchell M.
Levy, Derek C. Angus and Christopher W. Seymour
Critical Care volume 27,
Article number: 236 Published: 15
June 2023
Background
Sepsis is common, deadly, and heterogenous. Prior analyses
of patients with sepsis and septic shock in New York State showed a
risk-adjusted association between more rapid antibiotic administration and
bundled care completion, but not an intravenous fluid bolus, with reduced
in-hospital mortality. However, it is unknown if clinically identifiable sepsis
subtypes modify these associations.
Methods
Secondary analysis of patients with sepsis and septic shock
enrolled in the New York State Department of Health cohort from January 1, 2015
to December 31, 2016. Patients were classified as clinical sepsis subtypes (α,
β, γ, δ-types) using the Sepsis ENdotyping in Emergency CAre (SENECA) approach.
Exposure variables included time to 3-h sepsis bundle completion, antibiotic
administration, and intravenous fluid bolus completion. Then logistic
regression models evaluated the interaction between exposures, clinical sepsis
subtypes, and in-hospital mortality.
Results
55,169 hospitalizations from 155 hospitals were included
(34% α, 30% β, 19% γ, 17% δ). The α-subtype had the lowest (N = 1,905, 10%) and
δ-subtype had the highest (N = 3,776, 41%) in-hospital mortality. Each hour to
completion of the 3-h bundle (aOR, 1.04 [95%CI, 1.02–1.05]) and antibiotic
initiation (aOR, 1.03 [95%CI, 1.02–1.04]) was associated with increased
risk-adjusted in-hospital mortality. The association differed across subtypes
(p-interactions < 0.05). For example, the outcome association for the time
to completion of the 3-h bundle was greater in the δ-subtype (aOR, 1.07 [95%CI,
1.05–1.10]) compared to α-subtype (aOR, 1.02 [95%CI, 0.99–1.04]). Time to
intravenous fluid bolus completion was not associated with risk-adjusted
in-hospital mortality (aOR, 0.99 [95%CI, 0.97–1.01]) and did not differ among
subtypes (p-interaction = 0.41).
Conclusion
Timely completion of a 3-h sepsis bundle and antibiotic
initiation was associated with reduced risk-adjusted in-hospital mortality, an
association modified by clinically identifiable sepsis subtype.
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