Journal of Intensive Care (Feb 2018)

The Japanese Clinical Practice Guidelines for Management of Sepsis and Septic Shock 2016 (J-SSCG 2016)

  • Osamu Nishida,
  • Hiroshi Ogura,
  • Moritoki Egi,
  • Seitaro Fujishima,
  • Yoshiro Hayashi,
  • Toshiaki Iba,
  • Hitoshi Imaizumi,
  • Shigeaki Inoue,
  • Yasuyuki Kakihana,
  • Joji Kotani,
  • Shigeki Kushimoto,
  • Yoshiki Masuda,
  • Naoyuki Matsuda,
  • Asako Matsushima,
  • Taka-aki Nakada,
  • Satoshi Nakagawa,
  • Shin Nunomiya,
  • Tomohito Sadahiro,
  • Nobuaki Shime,
  • Tomoaki Yatabe,
  • Yoshitaka Hara,
  • Kei Hayashida,
  • Yutaka Kondo,
  • Yuka Sumi,
  • Hideto Yasuda,
  • Kazuyoshi Aoyama,
  • Takeo Azuhata,
  • Kent Doi,
  • Matsuyuki Doi,
  • Naoyuki Fujimura,
  • Ryota Fuke,
  • Tatsuma Fukuda,
  • Koji Goto,
  • Ryuichi Hasegawa,
  • Satoru Hashimoto,
  • Junji Hatakeyama,
  • Mineji Hayakawa,
  • Toru Hifumi,
  • Naoki Higashibeppu,
  • Katsuki Hirai,
  • Tomoya Hirose,
  • Kentaro Ide,
  • Yasuo Kaizuka,
  • Tomomichi Kan’o,
  • Tatsuya Kawasaki,
  • Hiromitsu Kuroda,
  • Akihisa Matsuda,
  • Shotaro Matsumoto,
  • Masaharu Nagae,
  • Mutsuo Onodera,
  • Tetsu Ohnuma,
  • Kiyohiro Oshima,
  • Nobuyuki Saito,
  • So Sakamoto,
  • Masaaki Sakuraya,
  • Mikio Sasano,
  • Norio Sato,
  • Atsushi Sawamura,
  • Kentaro Shimizu,
  • Kunihiro Shirai,
  • Tetsuhiro Takei,
  • Muneyuki Takeuchi,
  • Kohei Takimoto,
  • Takumi Taniguchi,
  • Hiroomi Tatsumi,
  • Ryosuke Tsuruta,
  • Naoya Yama,
  • Kazuma Yamakawa,
  • Chizuru Yamashita,
  • Kazuto Yamashita,
  • Takeshi Yoshida,
  • Hiroshi Tanaka,
  • Shigeto Oda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40560-017-0270-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 77

Abstract

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Abstract Background and purpose The Japanese Clinical Practice Guidelines for Management of Sepsis and Septic Shock 2016 (J-SSCG 2016), a Japanese-specific set of clinical practice guidelines for sepsis and septic shock created jointly by the Japanese Society of Intensive Care Medicine and the Japanese Association for Acute Medicine, was first released in February 2017 and published in the Journal of JSICM, [2017; Volume 24 (supplement 2)] https://doi.org/10.3918/jsicm.24S0001 and Journal of Japanese Association for Acute Medicine [2017; Volume 28, (supplement 1)] http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jja2.2017.28.issue-S1/issuetoc. This abridged English edition of the J-SSCG 2016 was produced with permission from the Japanese Association of Acute Medicine and the Japanese Society for Intensive Care Medicine. Methods Members of the Japanese Society of Intensive Care Medicine and the Japanese Association for Acute Medicine were selected and organized into 19 committee members and 52 working group members. The guidelines were prepared in accordance with the Medical Information Network Distribution Service (Minds) creation procedures. The Academic Guidelines Promotion Team was organized to oversee and provide academic support to the respective activities allocated to each Guideline Creation Team. To improve quality assurance and workflow transparency, a mutual peer review system was established, and discussions within each team were open to the public. Public comments were collected once after the initial formulation of a clinical question (CQ) and twice during the review of the final draft. Recommendations were determined to have been adopted after obtaining support from a two-thirds (> 66.6%) majority vote of each of the 19 committee members. Results A total of 87 CQs were selected among 19 clinical areas, including pediatric topics and several other important areas not covered in the first edition of the Japanese guidelines (J-SSCG 2012). The approval rate obtained through committee voting, in addition to ratings of the strengths of the recommendation, and its supporting evidence were also added to each recommendation statement. We conducted meta-analyses for 29 CQs. Thirty-seven CQs contained recommendations in the form of an expert consensus due to insufficient evidence. No recommendations were provided for five CQs. Conclusions Based on the evidence gathered, we were able to formulate Japanese-specific clinical practice guidelines that are tailored to the Japanese context in a highly transparent manner. These guidelines can easily be used not only by specialists, but also by non-specialists, general clinicians, nurses, pharmacists, clinical engineers, and other healthcare professionals.

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