Clinical and Experimental Emergency Medicine (Sep 2020)

Mortality difference between early-identified sepsis and late-identified sepsis

  • Woon Jee,
  • Sion Jo,
  • Jae Baek Lee,
  • Youngho Jin,
  • Taeoh Jeong,
  • Jae Chol Yoon,
  • Boyoung Park

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15441/ceem.19.009
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
pp. 150 – 160

Abstract

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Objective The aim of the study was to compare the mortality rates of patients with early-identified (EI) sepsis and late-identified (LI) sepsis. Methods We performed a retrospective chart review of patients admitted to the emergency department and diagnosed with sepsis. EI sepsis was defined as patients with a Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score ≥2, based on 3 parameters of the SOFA score (Glasgow coma scale, mean arterial pressure, and partial pressure of oxygen/fraction of inspired oxygen ratio), measured within an hour of emergency department admission. The remaining patients were defined as LI sepsis. The primary outcome was in-hospital mortality. Results Of the total 204 patients with sepsis, 113 (55.4%) had EI sepsis. Overall mortality rate was 15.7%, and EI sepsis group had significantly higher mortality than LI sepsis (23.0% vs. 6.6%, P=0.003). The patients with EI sepsis, compared to those with LI sepsis, had higher SOFA score (median: 4 vs. 2, P<0.001); Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) II score (median: 14 vs. 10, P<0.001); were more likely to progress to septic shock within 6 hours after admission (17.7% vs. 1.1%, P<0.001); were more likely to be admitted to the intensive care unit (2.2% vs. 1.1%, P=0.001). Conclusion Mortality was significantly higher in the EI sepsis group than in the LI sepsis group.

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