Clinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis (Dec 2023)

Sepsis-induced Coagulopathy: The Different Prognosis in Severe Pneumonia and Bacteremia Infection Patients

  • Rong Liufu MD,
  • Yan Chen MD,
  • Xi-Xi Wan MD,
  • Rui-Ting Liu MD,
  • Wei Jiang MD,
  • ChYao Wang MD,
  • Jin-Min Peng MD,
  • Li Weng MD,
  • Bin Du MD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/10760296231219249
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29

Abstract

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Sepsis-induced coagulopathy (SIC) is a critical condition in sepsis patients, with varying outcomes depending on the type of infection. This study aims to analyze the prognosis of different infections in SIC cohort. A retrospective cohort study was conducted on 525 patients diagnosed with SIC in the intensive care unit from December 2013 to December 2022. These patients were divided into four groups: a non-pneumonia or bacteremia group, a severe pneumonia group, a bacteremia group, and a severe pneumonia concomitant with bacteremia group. The 28-day mortality was 18% (49/271) in the other infections group, 31% (33/106) in the lung infections group, 23% (29/126) in the blood infections group and 36% (8/36) in the lung and blood co-infections group, respectively. Pearson correlation analysis showed that procalcitonin (PCT) correlated strongly with all detected hemostatic markers ( p < 0.001). The 28-day mortality rate in Lung infections group was significantly higher ( p = 0.019), while Blood infections group had a higher incidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation ( p = 0.011). By multivariable model analyses, longer duration of ventilation ( p = 0.039) and severe pneumonia ( p = 0.040) are risk factors associated with mortality. Different infections, including Lung and Blood infections, indicated different conditions in vivo. Longer duration of ventilation is associated with mortality, while Lung infections indicated higher 28-day mortality rate.