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Sepsis Prevalence and Outcome on the General Wards and Emergency Departments in Wales: Results of a Multi-Centre, Observational, Point Prevalence Study

Data on sepsis prevalence on the general wards is lacking on the UK and in the developed world. We conducted a multicentre, prospective, observational study of the prevalence of patients with sepsis or severe sepsis on the general wards and Emergency Departments (ED) in Wales. During the 24-hour stu...

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Autores principales: Szakmany, Tamas, Lundin, Robert M., Sharif, Ben, Ellis, Gemma, Morgan, Paul, Kopczynska, Maja, Dhadda, Amrit, Mann, Charlotte, Donoghue, Danielle, Rollason, Sarah, Brownlow, Emma, Hill, Francesca, Carr, Grace, Turley, Hannah, Hassall, James, Lloyd, James, Davies, Llywela, Atkinson, Michael, Jones, Molly, Jones, Nerys, Martin, Rhodri, Ibrahim, Yousef, Hall, Judith E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5132245/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27907062
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0167230
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author Szakmany, Tamas
Lundin, Robert M.
Sharif, Ben
Ellis, Gemma
Morgan, Paul
Kopczynska, Maja
Dhadda, Amrit
Mann, Charlotte
Donoghue, Danielle
Rollason, Sarah
Brownlow, Emma
Hill, Francesca
Carr, Grace
Turley, Hannah
Hassall, James
Lloyd, James
Davies, Llywela
Atkinson, Michael
Jones, Molly
Jones, Nerys
Martin, Rhodri
Ibrahim, Yousef
Hall, Judith E.
author_facet Szakmany, Tamas
Lundin, Robert M.
Sharif, Ben
Ellis, Gemma
Morgan, Paul
Kopczynska, Maja
Dhadda, Amrit
Mann, Charlotte
Donoghue, Danielle
Rollason, Sarah
Brownlow, Emma
Hill, Francesca
Carr, Grace
Turley, Hannah
Hassall, James
Lloyd, James
Davies, Llywela
Atkinson, Michael
Jones, Molly
Jones, Nerys
Martin, Rhodri
Ibrahim, Yousef
Hall, Judith E.
author_sort Szakmany, Tamas
collection PubMed
description Data on sepsis prevalence on the general wards is lacking on the UK and in the developed world. We conducted a multicentre, prospective, observational study of the prevalence of patients with sepsis or severe sepsis on the general wards and Emergency Departments (ED) in Wales. During the 24-hour study period all patients with NEWS≥3 were screened for presence of 2 or more SIRS criteria. To be eligible for inclusion, patients had to have a high clinical suspicion of an infection, together with a systemic inflammatory response (sepsis) and evidence of acute organ dysfunction and/or shock (severe sepsis). There were 5317 in-patients in the 24-hour study period. Data were returned on 1198 digital data collection forms on patients with NEWS≥3 of which 87 were removed, leaving 1111 for analysis. 146 patients had sepsis and 144 patients had severe sepsis. Combined prevalence of sepsis and severe sepsis was 5.5% amongst all in-patients. Patients with sepsis had significantly higher NEWS scores (3 IQR 3–4 for non-sepsis and 4 IQR 3–6 for sepsis patients, respectively). Common organ dysfunctions in severe sepsis were hypoxia (47%), hypoperfusion (40%) and acute kidney injury (25%). Mortality at 90 days was 31% with a median (IQR) hospital free stay of 78 (36–85) days. Screening for sepsis, referral to Critical Care and completion of Sepsis 6 bundle was low: 26%, 16% and 12% in the sepsis group. Multivariable logistic regression analysis identified higher National Early Warning Score, diabetes, COPD, heart failure, malignancy and current or previous smoking habits as independent variables suggesting the diagnosis of sepsis. We observed that sepsis is more prevalent in the general ward and ED than previously suggested before and that screening and effective treatment for sepsis and severe sepsis is far from being operationalized in this environment, leading to high 90 days mortality.
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spelling pubmed-51322452016-12-21 Sepsis Prevalence and Outcome on the General Wards and Emergency Departments in Wales: Results of a Multi-Centre, Observational, Point Prevalence Study Szakmany, Tamas Lundin, Robert M. Sharif, Ben Ellis, Gemma Morgan, Paul Kopczynska, Maja Dhadda, Amrit Mann, Charlotte Donoghue, Danielle Rollason, Sarah Brownlow, Emma Hill, Francesca Carr, Grace Turley, Hannah Hassall, James Lloyd, James Davies, Llywela Atkinson, Michael Jones, Molly Jones, Nerys Martin, Rhodri Ibrahim, Yousef Hall, Judith E. PLoS One Research Article Data on sepsis prevalence on the general wards is lacking on the UK and in the developed world. We conducted a multicentre, prospective, observational study of the prevalence of patients with sepsis or severe sepsis on the general wards and Emergency Departments (ED) in Wales. During the 24-hour study period all patients with NEWS≥3 were screened for presence of 2 or more SIRS criteria. To be eligible for inclusion, patients had to have a high clinical suspicion of an infection, together with a systemic inflammatory response (sepsis) and evidence of acute organ dysfunction and/or shock (severe sepsis). There were 5317 in-patients in the 24-hour study period. Data were returned on 1198 digital data collection forms on patients with NEWS≥3 of which 87 were removed, leaving 1111 for analysis. 146 patients had sepsis and 144 patients had severe sepsis. Combined prevalence of sepsis and severe sepsis was 5.5% amongst all in-patients. Patients with sepsis had significantly higher NEWS scores (3 IQR 3–4 for non-sepsis and 4 IQR 3–6 for sepsis patients, respectively). Common organ dysfunctions in severe sepsis were hypoxia (47%), hypoperfusion (40%) and acute kidney injury (25%). Mortality at 90 days was 31% with a median (IQR) hospital free stay of 78 (36–85) days. Screening for sepsis, referral to Critical Care and completion of Sepsis 6 bundle was low: 26%, 16% and 12% in the sepsis group. Multivariable logistic regression analysis identified higher National Early Warning Score, diabetes, COPD, heart failure, malignancy and current or previous smoking habits as independent variables suggesting the diagnosis of sepsis. We observed that sepsis is more prevalent in the general ward and ED than previously suggested before and that screening and effective treatment for sepsis and severe sepsis is far from being operationalized in this environment, leading to high 90 days mortality. Public Library of Science 2016-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5132245/ /pubmed/27907062 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0167230 Text en © 2016 Szakmany et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Szakmany, Tamas
Lundin, Robert M.
Sharif, Ben
Ellis, Gemma
Morgan, Paul
Kopczynska, Maja
Dhadda, Amrit
Mann, Charlotte
Donoghue, Danielle
Rollason, Sarah
Brownlow, Emma
Hill, Francesca
Carr, Grace
Turley, Hannah
Hassall, James
Lloyd, James
Davies, Llywela
Atkinson, Michael
Jones, Molly
Jones, Nerys
Martin, Rhodri
Ibrahim, Yousef
Hall, Judith E.
Sepsis Prevalence and Outcome on the General Wards and Emergency Departments in Wales: Results of a Multi-Centre, Observational, Point Prevalence Study
title Sepsis Prevalence and Outcome on the General Wards and Emergency Departments in Wales: Results of a Multi-Centre, Observational, Point Prevalence Study
title_full Sepsis Prevalence and Outcome on the General Wards and Emergency Departments in Wales: Results of a Multi-Centre, Observational, Point Prevalence Study
title_fullStr Sepsis Prevalence and Outcome on the General Wards and Emergency Departments in Wales: Results of a Multi-Centre, Observational, Point Prevalence Study
title_full_unstemmed Sepsis Prevalence and Outcome on the General Wards and Emergency Departments in Wales: Results of a Multi-Centre, Observational, Point Prevalence Study
title_short Sepsis Prevalence and Outcome on the General Wards and Emergency Departments in Wales: Results of a Multi-Centre, Observational, Point Prevalence Study
title_sort sepsis prevalence and outcome on the general wards and emergency departments in wales: results of a multi-centre, observational, point prevalence study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5132245/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27907062
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0167230
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