Abstract
Sepsis remains a prevalent critical illness encountered in emergency departments and intensive care units (ICU), with culture-negative sepsis constituting 30-60% of cases. The effect of culture type on treatment and outcomes remains unclear, and conflicting evidence exists regarding disparities between Gram-positive and Gram-negative infections. To further describe and compare characteristics and outcomes of culture-positive versus culture-negative sepsis. This retrospective cohort study included 1375 patients admitted to the ICU of a single tertiary care hospital between 2016 and 2019 with a diagnosis of sepsis or septic shock. Patients who did not meet the screening criteria, lacked drawn or documented cultures, or had documented non-bacterial infections, were excluded. The primary outcome was disease severity and secondary outcomes included in-hospital mortality and duration of hospital and ICU stay. The principal and secondary exposure variables were blood culture status (positive vs. negative) and Gram staining (positive vs. negative), respectively. Overall, 943 patients (68.5%) were culture-negative and 432 (31.5%) were culture-positive. Gram-positive bacteria were isolated from 178 patients, Gram-negative bacteria from 199 patients, and both from 55 patients. Culture-positive patients demonstrated an almost two-fold higher likelihood of requiring vasopressors (adjusted odds ratio (OR): 1.98), a higher incidence of stress-dose steroid administration (adjusted OR, 1.68), and higher resuscitative fluid administration at six and 72 hours than culture-negative patients. No significant between-group differences emerged in the ICU or hospital length of stay, or mortality. No significant variations were observed when comparing Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteremia. Although significant differences in illness severity existed between blood culture-negative and blood culture-positive patients with sepsis, patient-oriented secondary outcomes did not exhibit significant between-group differences. These results indicate that clinicians should not be reassured by the lack of proven bacteremia in patients with suspected sepsis, given similar outcomes.
Published Version
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