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Dr. Vida Hamilton National Clinical Lead Sepsis

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Presentation on theme: "Dr. Vida Hamilton National Clinical Lead Sepsis"— Presentation transcript:

1 Dr. Vida Hamilton National Clinical Lead Sepsis www.hse.ie/sepsis
So what about SEPSIS? Dr. Vida Hamilton National Clinical Lead Sepsis

2 Sepsis ‘Final common pathway for death from infection’
National Awareness Survey 2016 25% Doctors & 29% Nurses interviewed  didn’t think you needed infection to develop sepsis

3 Content Validity Face validity

4 Epidemiology 2016 14000 cases 70-80% arise in the Community (CDC)
19% Hospital mortality 70-80% arise in the Community (CDC) Increasing in incidence 10 % annually pre 2016 67% over past 12 months Factors that are associated with increasing incidence & high mortality rate?

5 Epidemiology

6 Number of cases  with age

7 Mortality  with age

8 With co-morbidities

9 Surgical DRG

10 Seasonal variation

11 No gender difference

12 30%  Mortality

13 Risk stratification

14 3.4% hospital cases 25% hospital deaths

15 Bed occupancy partial offset by 28.5% aLOS

16 What is sepsis? Infection Triggering an host response
Leads to organ dysfunction & death

17 Pathophysiology

18 Sepsis 1 & 2: ‘Hyper-inflammatory to dysregulated response’
Bone 1996

19 Infection Non-specific signs & symptoms SIRS Temperature
T > 38.3 or < 36oC Rigors HR > 90 beats/min Anorexia RR > 20 breaths/min Fatigue WCC > 12 or < 4 Myalgia CRP Arthralgia Procalcitonin Vomiting & diarrhoea

20 Sites of infection Respiratory 35 - 50% Urinary tract 15 - 25%
Intra-abdominal % Skin 11% Catheter-related, device-related, intra-articular, boney, post-procedural etc

21 Clinical signs of organ dysfunction
Brain Acute confusion Altered functional state Lungs RR > 30 Hypoxia Heart HR > 130 SBP < 100 or > 40mmHg drop from normal level Kidneys Oligourea Creatinine > 177 Skin Prolonged central capillary refill Purpuric rash Lactate >2mmol/L

22 Lactate Trzeciak, S et al. Int Care Med 2007; 33(6):870-7.

23 Sepsis related organ dysfunction

24 Clinical presentation
Micro-organism Virulence Innoculation dose Multi-drug resistance Host Genetic polymorphisms Co-morbidities Age Chronic health status Immuno-modulatory medications

25 Sepsis-3 ‘A life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection’ Advantage: ‘Now that’s sepsis!’ Disadvantage: Move from ‘bedside diagnosis’ definition with SIRS Looking at higher mortality risk condition, ‘badness’, to an ‘outcome’ based definition Risk of time delay to diagnosis qSOFA now widely discredited as a screening tool

26 SOFA ≥ 2 above baseline consequent to the infection

27 Sepsis diagnosis

28 Criteria validity How can the patients who may benefit from early treatment be identified?

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30 Why don’t we just use qSOFA?
qSOFA positive if > 1 present RR > 22, SBP < 100, Altered mental status Prognostic indicator Not a diagnostic tool Not a ‘trigger to treat’ tool Not validated in undifferentiated patients Developed in patients already on antimicrobial therapy NEWS consistently outperforms qSOFA

31 Significant Co-morbidities
COPD Frailty Age > 75yrs Diabetes mellitus Chronic kidney disease Chronic liver disease Cancer Immunosuppressed HIV/AIDS infection Trauma or surgery in past 6 weeks

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33 Sepsis 6 bundle

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35 Give 3 Take 3 1.OXYGEN: Titrate O2 to saturations of % or 88-92% in chronic lung disease. 1. CULTURES: Take blood cultures before giving antimicrobials (if no significant delay i.e. >45 minutes) and consider source control.  2. FLUIDS: Start IV fluid resuscitation if evidence of hypovolaemia. 500ml bolus of isotonic crystalloid over 15mins & give up to 30ml/kg, reassessing for signs of hypovolaemia, euvolaemia, or fluid overload. 2.BLOODS: Check point of care lactate, FBC, U&E, LFTS, +/- Coag.  Other tests and investigations as per history and examination. 3. ANTIMICROBIALS: Give IV antimicrobials according to local antimicrobial guidelines. 3. URINE OUTPUT: Assess urine output and consider urinary catheterisation for accurate measurement in patients with severe sepsis/septic shock.

36 Sepsis diagnosis

37 Translating research into clinical practice
Context validity Translating research into clinical practice Or Generalisability

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42 Inter-user, across place and across time
Reliabilty Inter-user, across place and across time

43 Only 56% of sepsis cases were documented as sepsis in the case notes
Audit results n= 1489 With form Without form Diagnosis made and documented 87% 44% Risk stratification correct 74% 24% 1st dose antimicrobials within 1 hour 74.5% 46.5% Only 56% of sepsis cases were documented as sepsis in the case notes

44 Fluid resuscitation and Mortality
Figure 3. Mean hospital mortality among patients with decreased lactate within 8 hours of index test, stratified by total fluid received in increments of 7.5 ml/kg based on medication administration record. Annals ATS, 2013

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46 Timeliness

47 Operationalisation An important feature of our pilot studies
Is the CDST useable within the clinical context Triage screen important but a potential added burden ECG in chest pain Does it add or reduce work Benefit needs to out way any burden

48 If you don’t measure it you can’t change it
Measurement If you don’t measure it you can’t change it

49 Compliance with Sepsis 6 2017
Process audit National Compliance Sepsis documented correctly 60% Antibiotics within the 1st hour 72% Antibiotic as per guideline 64% Blood cultures before antibiotic 80% Lactate taken 75% Repeat lactate (when indicated) 71% Fluid bolus 42%

50 OECD Health Care Quality Indicators Healthcare Quality Reporting System, Ireland, 2015
Number per annum Mortality Change in Mortality AMI 6,125 6.4%  40% H. Stroke 1,456 26%  I. Stroke 4,485 10%  % Sepsis 14,000 19%  30% (2011)

51

52 Thank you


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