Abstract

To describe the epidemiology of sepsis in critical care by applying the Sepsis-3 criteria to electronic health records. Retrospective cohort study using electronic health records. Ten ICUs from four U.K. National Health Service hospital trusts contributing to the National Institute for Health Research Critical Care Health Informatics Collaborative. A total of 28,456 critical care admissions (14,332 emergency medical, 4,585 emergency surgical, and 9,539 elective surgical). Twenty-nine thousand three hundred forty-three episodes of clinical deterioration were identified with a rise in Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score of at least 2 points, of which 14,869 (50.7%) were associated with antibiotic escalation and thereby met the Sepsis-3 criteria for sepsis. A total of 4,100 episodes of sepsis (27.6%) were associated with vasopressor use and lactate greater than 2.0 mmol/L, and therefore met the Sepsis-3 criteria for septic shock. ICU mortality by source of sepsis was highest for ICU-acquired sepsis (23.7%; 95% CI, 21.9-25.6%), followed by hospital-acquired sepsis (18.6%; 95% CI, 17.5-19.9%), and community-acquired sepsis (12.9%; 95% CI, 12.1-13.6%) (p for comparison less than 0.0001). We successfully operationalized the Sepsis-3 criteria to an electronic health record dataset to describe the characteristics of critical care patients with sepsis. This may facilitate sepsis research using electronic health record data at scale without relying on human coding.

Highlights

  • The increasing pathogenicity of infecting organisms in Antibiotic prescribing changed over the course of ICU, increased encounters with multidrug-resistant the patients’ ICU admission; rank 1 and 2 antibiotics bacteria, and deteriorating physiologic resilience of the patient

  • We found high reliance on broad and extended spectrum antibiotics

  • 10 Centre for Perioperative Medicine and Critical Care Research, Imperial College Healthcare National Health Service (NHS) Trust, London, United Kingdom

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Summary

Objectives

To describe the epidemiology of sepsis in critical care by applying the Sepsis-3 criteria to electronic health records

Methods
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