Sepsis Infozentrale – Aktuelles Wissen rund um Sepsis
Unsere Sepsis Infozentrale bietet fundierte und unabhängige Informationen zur Prävention, Diagnostik, Behandlung und Nachsorge von Sepsis und auf die Versorgungsforschung rund um das Thema: Wie häufig ist Sepsis? Wie wird sie versorgt? Wie sind die Ergebnisse? Was erleben Patientinnen und Patienten?.
Ein zentrales Element ist unsere Literaturdatenbank, die eine qualifizierte Auswahl aktueller wissenschaftlicher Erkenntnisse aus renommierten Quellen bereitstellt. Durch regelmäßige, systematische Recherchen in der Medline-Datenbank der National Library of Medicine wird sie wöchentlich aktualisiert und erweitert – für stets aktuelle, evidenzbasierte Informationen.
Bleiben Sie informiert und vertiefen Sie Ihr Wissen rund um Sepsis!
Unsere Wissens- und Literatur-Datenbank richtet sich an Ärztinnen und Ärzte, die in die Prävention, Diagnostik, Behandlung und Nachsorge der Sepsis eingebunden sind, an medizinische Fachkräfte, Patientinnen und Patienten sowie Selbsthilfegruppen. Sie dient auch zur Information anderer Organisationen des Gesundheitswesens und der interessierten Fachöffentlichkeit.
Informationen zur Literaturdatenbank
Die Datenbank bietet eine qualifizierte Auswahl aktueller, unabhängiger Informationen zur Prävention, Diagnostik, Behandlung und Nachsorge von Sepsis. Auf Grund der äußerst engen pathophysiologischen Verknüpfungen der COVID-19-Erkrankung und der Sepsis werden auch diesbezügliche Publikationen unabhängig von einem septischen Verlauf der SARS-CoV-2-Infektion eingeschlossen. Die vorliegende Liste berücksichtigt Publikationen, die aus Literaturverzeichnissen von Leitlinien, internationalen Fachgesellschaften und Organisationen, sowie aus systematischen Reviews ausgewählt wurden, ergänzt durch Expertenempfehlungen. Die Datenbank wird wöchentlich durch systematische Literatursuche in der Medline-Datenbank der National Library of Medicine aktualisiert und die Ergebnisse vom Redaktionsteam hinsichtlich der Relevanz bewertet. Die gelisteten Publikationen werden nach wissenschaftlicher Qualität und Evidenz ausgewählt, jedoch ohne systematische Quantifizierung der Evidenz. Die Datenbank erhebt nicht den Anspruch auf Vollständigkeit. Der wissenschaftliche Beirat der Sepsis-Stiftung überprüft die Auswahl jährlich. Ein Klick auf den im Pfeil integrierten DOI-Link öffnet das jeweilige Abstract oder den Volltext der entsprechenden Publikation in einem neuen Tab.
Neonatal sepsis remains one of the key challenges of neonatal medicine, and
together with preterm birth, causes almost 50% of all deaths globally for
children younger than 5 years. Compared with advances achieved for other serious
neonatal and early childhood conditions globally, progress in reducing neonatal
sepsis has been much slower, especially in low-resource…
Neonatal sepsis remains one of the key challenges of neonatal medicine, and
together with preterm birth, causes almost 50% of all deaths globally for
children younger than 5 years. Compared with advances achieved for other serious
neonatal and early childhood conditions globally, progress in reducing neonatal
sepsis has been much slower, especially in low-resource settings that have the
highest burden of neonatal sepsis morbidity and mortality. By contrast to sepsis
in older patients, there is no universally accepted neonatal sepsis definition.
This poses substantial challenges in clinical practice, research, and
health-care management, and has direct practical implications, such as
diagnostic inconsistency, heterogeneous data collection and surveillance, and
inappropriate treatment, health-resource allocation, and education. As the
clinical manifestation of neonatal sepsis is frequently non-specific and the
current diagnostic standard blood culture has performance limitations, new
improved diagnostic techniques are required to guide appropriate and warranted
antimicrobial treatment. Although antimicrobial therapy and supportive care
continue as principal components of neonatal sepsis therapy, refining basic
neonatal care to prevent sepsis through education and quality improvement
initiatives remains paramount.
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Amy Kule, Eunice Singletary, Gustavo E Flores, Therese Djarv, Willem Stassen — Cureus
★★★☆☆
2024
Abstract
Sepsis accounts for a significant proportion of preventable deaths worldwide and
early treatment has been found to be a mainstay of decreasing mortality. Early
identification of sepsis in the first-aid setting is critical as this results in
a shorter time to hospital presentation and management with antibiotics and
initial resuscitation. Our aim was to…
Sepsis accounts for a significant proportion of preventable deaths worldwide and
early treatment has been found to be a mainstay of decreasing mortality. Early
identification of sepsis in the first-aid setting is critical as this results in
a shorter time to hospital presentation and management with antibiotics and
initial resuscitation. Our aim was to explore the existing literature related to
either sepsis recognition or awareness of sepsis by first-aid providers who are
evaluating an adult suspected of an acute infection. Our scoping review was
performed as part of the International Liaison Committee on Resuscitation’s
(ILCOR) continuous evidence evaluation process to update the 2024 ILCOR
Consensus on Science with Treatment Recommendations. We searched Embase,
Medline, and Cochrane databases from their inception to January 17, 2023, with
updated searches performed on November 21, 2023, and December 2, 2023. The gray
literature search was conducted on August 29, 2023. The population included
adults presenting with an acute illness exhibiting signs and symptoms of a
severe infection. Outcomes included sepsis recognition or awareness of sepsis by
a lay first-aid provider. After reviewing 4380 potential sources, four reviews
(three systematic reviews and one scoping review), 11 observational studies, and
27 websites met the inclusion criteria. No study directly addressed our PICOST
(Population, Intervention, Comparator, Outcomes, Study Design, and Timeframe)
question as none were performed in the first-aid setting. Three systematic
reviews and nine observational studies that assessed the ability of early
warning scores to detect sepsis and predict adverse outcomes secondary to sepsis
had inconsistent results, but many found the screening tools to be useful. One
scoping review and one observational study found public knowledge and awareness
of sepsis to be variable and dependent upon healthcare employment, location,
education level, ethnicity, sex, and age. Signs and symptoms associated with
sepsis as listed by gray literature sources fell primarily under nine general
categories as a means of educating the public on sepsis recognition. Although
this scoping review did not identify any studies that directly addressed our
outcomes, it highlights the need for future research to better understand the
recognition of sepsis in first-aid settings.
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Claudia Nieuwoudt, R Phillips Heine, Sarah E White, Talla Motakef Widelock — Clinical obstetrics and gynecology
★★★☆☆
2024
Abstract
Sepsis is the second leading cause of pregnancy-related mortality in the United
States. Early recognition, treatment, and escalation of care for the obstetric
patient affected by sepsis mitigate the risk of mortality and improve patient
outcomes. In this article, we provide an overview of maternal sepsis and address
topics of maternal pathophysiology, early warning…
Sepsis is the second leading cause of pregnancy-related mortality in the United
States. Early recognition, treatment, and escalation of care for the obstetric
patient affected by sepsis mitigate the risk of mortality and improve patient
outcomes. In this article, we provide an overview of maternal sepsis and address
topics of maternal pathophysiology, early warning signs, diagnostic criteria,
early goal-directed therapy, and contemporary critical care practices. We also
present an overview of common etiologies of maternal sepsis and suggested
treatment approaches.
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Angela R Morelli, Animesh C Gour, Brandon D Nornhold, Diane V Thompson, Jestin N Carlson, Travis S Grey, Zenalabdin H Jabir — Journal of critical care
★★★☆☆
2024
Abstract
Objective: Determine whether a delay in the administration of the second dose of
antibiotics is associated with an increased risk of mortality for patients
admitted with septic shock. Design: Retrospective, observational evaluation.
Setting: Regional multicenter evaluation including four institutions in western
Pennsylvania. Patients: A total of 905 patients were included in this study who
met…
Objective: Determine whether a delay in the administration of the second dose of
antibiotics is associated with an increased risk of mortality for patients
admitted with septic shock. Design: Retrospective, observational evaluation.
Setting: Regional multicenter evaluation including four institutions in western
Pennsylvania. Patients: A total of 905 patients were included in this study who
met the criteria for septic shock. Patients that did not receive a second dose
of antibiotics, were transferred from an outside facility, or expected death
within six hours of hospital admission were excluded. Interventions: The
frequency of second antibiotic dose administration delay was determined. A delay
was defined as a delay greater than or equal to 25% of the antibiotic dosing
interval. Measurements and main results: A delay in second antibiotic dose
administration was found in 181 (20%) of patients. Patients with a delay in the
administration of second dose antibiotics had a higher mortality rate (35%) than
patients without a delay (26%) (p =0.018). Patients with and without a delay in
the administration of second-dose antibiotics had similar median 28-day
vasopressor free days (median = 26.0, IQR = 2.0). Differences in the
distribution of the 28-day vasopressor free days between groups resulted in the
achievement of statistical significance (Mann-Whitney U = 57,294.5, z = -2.690,
p = 0.006). There was no difference in 28-day ventilator-free days between
groups. A delay in the administration of second dose antibiotics led to a longer
in-hospital length of stay (9 days vs. 7 days; p = 0.022) and a longer ICU
length of stay than patients without a delay (5 days vs. 3 days; p = 0.007).
Conclusions: Delays in second antibiotic dose administration in septic shock
patients were present but lower than previous studies. These delays were
associated with increased mortality, increased ICU and hospital length of stay.
Keywords: Antibiotics, Critical care, Septic shock
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Effektivität von Qualitätsverbesserungsmaßnahmen, Therapeutische Aspekte der Sepsis
Kommentar
Improving prevention and early detection of sepsis among patient groups at risk: Introducing a model for a multimodal information campaign-The SepWiss study protocol
Claudia Spies, Edmund Neugebauer, Elisa Wulkotte, Evjenia Toubekis, Konrad Reinhart, Odette Wegwarth, Sebastian Born, Silke Piedmont, Thorsten Rieck, Wiltrud Abels — PloS one
★★★☆☆
2024
Abstract
Background: Sepsis is a life-threatening organ dysfunction due to a dysregulated
host response to infection. Annually, sepsis leads to approx. 90.000 deaths in
Germany. Risk factors include amongst others older age (>60), innate or acquired
dysfunction of the immune system, and underlying chronic diseases of the lung,
heart, liver, or kidneys. The manifestation of…
Background: Sepsis is a life-threatening organ dysfunction due to a dysregulated
host response to infection. Annually, sepsis leads to approx. 90.000 deaths in
Germany. Risk factors include amongst others older age (>60), innate or acquired
dysfunction of the immune system, and underlying chronic diseases of the lung,
heart, liver, or kidneys. The manifestation of sepsis is a medical emergency,
and patient outcomes depend on timely diagnosis and immediate treatment. In
addition, vaccinations e.g., against pneumococci or influenza virus, are a
highly effective public health tool to prevent the most common underlying
infections that may lead to sepsis. However, a lack of public awareness for the
relevance of vaccination and detecting sepsis as an emergency underlines the
need for public health interventions that address these issues. SepWiss aims to
evaluate the effects of a multimodal information campaign designed to address
this lack of awareness among the risk population in Germany. Methods: SepWiss is
an intervention at state level, consisting of a multimodal information campaign
targeting risk groups in the German federal states of Berlin and Brandenburg
(intervention region). Based on available evidence, various information formats
were developed and implemented by outdoor advertising, social media, educational
formats and through stakeholders‘ platforms, starting in August 2021. The
control region comprises of the remaining 14 German federal states. We will
analyze vaccination coverage (primary outcome), and sepsis knowledge, the
ability to detect sepsis as an emergency, and attitude towards vaccination
(secondary outcomes) amongst the risk population in a controlled before-after
comparison. The implementation is accompanied by a mixed-method process
evaluation. Discussion: SepWiss is the first project of its kind to evaluate a
complex multi-faceted evidence-based information campaign with regards to the
topics of vaccination coverage, and the importance of sepsis detection and
prevention for the most vulnerable populations in Germany. Results will be
valuable for informing further nationwide campaigns. Trial registration: German
Registry for Clinical Trials: DRKS00024475. Registered February 24th, 2021.
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Ines Rößler, Jan Mehrholz, Lars Heubner, Peter Spieth, Thea Koch, Ulf Bodechtel — Journal of rehabilitation medicine
★★★☆☆
2024
Abstract
Objective: To describe health-related quality of life and participation after
rehabilitation of severely affected sepsis survivors. Design: Cohort study.
Subjects/patients: Patients with severe sequelae after sepsis treated in a
multidisciplinary rehabilitation pathway were included. Methods: Patient
characteristics at the time of diagnosis, and the outcome 3 months after
discharge from rehabilitation are described. At that…
Objective: To describe health-related quality of life and participation after
rehabilitation of severely affected sepsis survivors. Design: Cohort study.
Subjects/patients: Patients with severe sequelae after sepsis treated in a
multidisciplinary rehabilitation pathway were included. Methods: Patient
characteristics at the time of diagnosis, and the outcome 3 months after
discharge from rehabilitation are described. At that time, health-related
quality of life, social participation, and the rate of living at home were
measured. Results: Of the 498 patients enrolled, 100 severely impaired patients
were transferred for a multidisciplinary rehabilitation approach. Fifty-five of
them were followed up at 3 months. Descriptive and inference statistics showed
that 69% were living at home with or without care. Health-related quality of
life and participation scores were 0.64 ± 0.32 for the EQ-5D utility index and
54.98 ± 24.97 for the Reintegration of Normal Living Index. A multivariate
regression model explaining health-related quality of life at 3 months included
age, lower limb strength, and walking ability during rehabilitation (r2 =
0.5511). Participation at 3 months was explained by age, body mass index, lower
limb strength, and duration of tracheal intubation (r2 = 0.6229). Conclusion:
Patients who have experienced serious sepsis with severe sequelae can achieve a
moderate level of quality of life and participation within a multidisciplinary
pathway.
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Source control is defined as the physical measures undertaken to eliminate the
source of infection and control ongoing contamination, as well as restore
anatomy and function at the site of infection. It is a key component of the
management of patients with sepsis and septic shock and one of the main
determinants of the…
Source control is defined as the physical measures undertaken to eliminate the
source of infection and control ongoing contamination, as well as restore
anatomy and function at the site of infection. It is a key component of the
management of patients with sepsis and septic shock and one of the main
determinants of the outcome of infections that require source control. While not
all infections may require source control, it should be considered in every
patient presenting with sepsis; it is applicable and necessary in numerous
infections, not only those occurring in the abdominal cavity. Although the
biological rationale is clear, several aspects of source control remain under
debate. The timing of source control may impact outcome; early source control is
particularly relevant for patients with abdominal infections or necrotizing skin
and soft tissue infections, as well as for those with more severe disease.
Percutaneous procedures are increasingly used for source control; nevertheless,
surgery-tailored to the patient and infection-remains a valid option for source
control. For outcome optimization, adequate source control is more important
than the strategy used. It should be acknowledged that source control
interventions may often fail, posing a challenge in this setting. Thus, an
individualized, multidisciplinary approach tailored to the infection and patient
is preferable.
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Background: To investigate the association between maternal sepsis during
pregnancy and poor pregnancy outcome and to identify risk factors for poor birth
outcomes and adverse perinatal events. Methods: We linked the Taiwan Birth
Cohort Study (TBCS) database and the Taiwanese National Health Insurance
Database (NHID) to conduct this population-based study. We analysed the data…
Background: To investigate the association between maternal sepsis during
pregnancy and poor pregnancy outcome and to identify risk factors for poor birth
outcomes and adverse perinatal events. Methods: We linked the Taiwan Birth
Cohort Study (TBCS) database and the Taiwanese National Health Insurance
Database (NHID) to conduct this population-based study. We analysed the data of
pregnant women who met the criteria for sepsis-3 during pregnancy between 2005
and 2017 as the maternal sepsis cases and selected pregnant women without
infection as the non-sepsis comparison cohort. Sepsis during pregnancy and
fulfilled the sepsis-3 definition proposed in 2016. The primary outcome included
low birth weight (LBW, < 2500 g) and preterm birth (< 34 weeks), and the
secondary outcome was the occurrence of adverse perinatal events. Results: We
enrolled 2,732 women who met the criteria for sepsis-3 during pregnancy and
196,333 non-sepsis controls. We found that the development of maternal sepsis
was highly associated with unfavourable pregnancy outcomes, including LBW (adjOR
9.51, 95% CI 8.73-10.36), preterm birth < 34 weeks (adjOR 11.69, 95%CI
10.64-12.84), and the adverse perinatal events (adjOR 3.09, 95% CI 2.83-3.36).
We also identified that socio-economically disadvantaged status was slightly
associated with an increased risk for low birth weight and preterm birth.
Conclusion: We found that the development of maternal sepsis was highly
associated with LBW, preterm birth and adverse perinatal events. Our findings
highlight the prolonged impact of maternal sepsis on pregnancy outcomes and
indicate the need for vigilance among pregnant women with sepsis. Keywords:
Birth outcome, Maternal sepsis, Perinatal outcome, Sepsis-3
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Alexander P J Vlaar, Bert-Jan H van den Born, Christian Hassager, Elma J Peters, Jacob E Møller, Jose P S Henriques, Lieuwe D J Bos, Lonneke A van Vught, Martin S Frydland, Olaf L Cremer — International journal of cardiology. Heart & vasculature
★★★☆☆
2024
Abstract
Background: In cardiogenic shock (CS), contractile failure is often accompanied
by a systemic inflammatory response syndrome. In contrast, many patients with
septic shock (SS) develop cardiac dysfunction. A similar hemodynamic support
strategy is often deployed in both syndromes but it is unclear whether this is
justified based on profiles of biomarkers expressing neurohormonal activation
and…
Background: In cardiogenic shock (CS), contractile failure is often accompanied
by a systemic inflammatory response syndrome. In contrast, many patients with
septic shock (SS) develop cardiac dysfunction. A similar hemodynamic support
strategy is often deployed in both syndromes but it is unclear whether this is
justified based on profiles of biomarkers expressing neurohormonal activation
and cardiovascular stress. Methods: In this prospective, multicenter cohort, 111
patients with acute myocardial infarction related CS were identified, and
matched to patients with SS. Clinical parameters were collected and blood
samples were obtained on day 1-3 of Intensive Care admission. Results: In this
shock cohort comprising 222 patients, with a mean age of 61 (±13.5) years and of
whom 161 (37 %) were male, we found that despite obvious clinical disparities on
admission, mortality at 30-days did not differ (CS: 40.5 % vs. SS 43.1 %, p =
0.56). Overall, plasma concentrations of all biomarkers were higher in SS
patients, with the largest difference on the first day. However, only in CS
patients the biomarker concentrations were associated with mortality.
Conclusion: In this prospective, multicenter cohort SS and CS patients showed
similarities in baseline conditions and had similar mortality. However, several
biomarkers only showed prognostic value in CS.
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Markus A Weigand, Thomas Schmoch, Thorsten Brenner — Die Anaesthesiologie
★★★☆☆
2024
Abstract
The time to administration of broad-spectrum antibiotics and (secondarily) to
the initiation of hemodynamic stabilization are the most important factors
influencing survival of patients with sepsis and septic shock; however, the
basic prerequisite for the initiation of an adequate treatment is that a
suspected diagnosis of sepsis is made first. Therefore, the treatment of…
The time to administration of broad-spectrum antibiotics and (secondarily) to
the initiation of hemodynamic stabilization are the most important factors
influencing survival of patients with sepsis and septic shock; however, the
basic prerequisite for the initiation of an adequate treatment is that a
suspected diagnosis of sepsis is made first. Therefore, the treatment of sepsis,
even before it has begun, is an interdisciplinary and interprofessional task.
This article provides an overview of the current state of the art in sepsis
treatment and points towards new evidence that has the potential to change
guideline recommendations in the coming years. In summary, the following points
are critical: (1) sepsis must be diagnosed as soon as possible and the
implementation of a source control intervention (in case of a controllable
source) has to be implemented as soon as (logistically) possible. (2) In
general, intravenous broad-spectrum antibiotics should be given within the first
hour after diagnosis if sepsis or septic shock is suspected. In organ
dysfunction without shock, where sepsis is a possible but unlikely cause, the
results of focused advanced diagnostics should be awaited before a decision to
give broad-spectrum antibiotics is made. If it is not clear within 3 h whether
sepsis is the cause, broad-spectrum antibiotics should be given when in doubt.
Administer beta-lactam antibiotics as a prolonged (or if therapeutic drug
monitoring is available, continuous) infusion after an initial loading dose. (3)
Combination treatment with two agents for one pathogen group should remain the
exception (e.g. multidrug-resistant gram-negative pathogens). (4) In the case of
doubt, the duration of anti-infective treatment should rather be shorter than
longer. Procalcitonin can support the clinical decision to stop (not to start!)
antibiotic treatment! (5) For fluid treatment, if hypoperfusion is present, the
first (approximately) 2L (30 ml/kg BW) of crystalloid solution is usually safe
and indicated. After that, the rule is: less is more! Any further fluid
administration should be carefully weighed up with the help of dynamic
parameters, the patient’s clinical condition and echo(cardio)graphy. Keywords:
Antiinfective therapy, Hemodynamic stabilization, Prolonged antibiotic
administration, Septic shock, Supportive therapy
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