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Model for predicting short-term mortality of severe sepsis

INTRODUCTION: To establish a prognostic model for predicting 14-day mortality in ICU patients with severe sepsis overall and according to place of infection acquisition and to sepsis episode number. METHODS: In this prospective multicentre observational study on a multicentre database (OUTCOMEREA) i...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Adrie, Christophe, Francais, Adrien, Alvarez-Gonzalez, Antonio, Mounier, Roman, Azoulay, Elie, Zahar, Jean-Ralph, Clec'h, Christophe, Goldgran-Toledano, Dany, Hammer, Laure, Descorps-Declere, Adrien, Jamali, Samir, Timsit, Jean-Francois
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2717433/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19454002
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc7881
Descripción
Sumario:INTRODUCTION: To establish a prognostic model for predicting 14-day mortality in ICU patients with severe sepsis overall and according to place of infection acquisition and to sepsis episode number. METHODS: In this prospective multicentre observational study on a multicentre database (OUTCOMEREA) including data from 12 ICUs, 2268 patients with 2737 episodes of severe sepsis were randomly divided into a training cohort (n = 1458) and a validation cohort (n = 810). Up to four consecutive severe sepsis episodes per patient occurring within the first 28 ICU days were included. We developed a prognostic model for predicting death within 14 days after each episode, based on patient data available at sepsis onset. RESULTS: Independent predictors of death were logistic organ dysfunction (odds ratio (OR), 1.22 per point, P < 10(-4)), septic shock (OR, 1.40; P = 0.01), rank of severe sepsis episode (1 reference, 2: OR, 1.26; P = 0.10 ≥ 3: OR, 2.64; P < 10(-3)), multiple sources of infection (OR; 1.45, P = 0.03), simplified acute physiology score II (OR, 1.02 per point; P < 10(-4)), McCabe score ([greater than or equal to]2) (OR, 1.96; P < 10(-4)), and number of chronic co-morbidities (1: OR, 1.75; P < 10(-3), ≥ 2: OR, 2.24, P < 10(-3)). Validity of the model was good in whole cohorts (AUC-ROC, 0.76; 95%CI, 0.74 to 0.79; and HL Chi-square: 15.3 (P = 0.06) for all episodes pooled). CONCLUSIONS: In ICU patients, a prognostic model based on a few easily obtained variables is effective in predicting death within 14 days after the first to fourth episode of severe sepsis complicating community-, hospital-, or ICU-acquired infection.