Digital Health (Jan 2022)

Risk-standardized sepsis mortality map of the United States

  • Jiun-Ruey Hu,
  • Chia-Hung Yo,
  • Hsin-Ying Lee,
  • Chin-Hua Su,
  • Ming-Yang Su,
  • Amy Huaishiuan Huang,
  • Ye Liu,
  • Wan-Ting Hsu,
  • Matthew Lee,
  • Yee-Chun Chen,
  • Chien-Chang Lee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/20552076211072400
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Objective Sepsis is the leading cause of in-hospital mortality in the United States (US). Quality improvement initiatives for improving sepsis care depend on accurate estimates of sepsis mortality. While hospital 30-day risk-standardized mortality rates have been published for patients hospitalized with acute myocardial infarction, heart failure, and pneumonia, risk-standardized mortality rates for sepsis have not been well characterized. We aimed to construct a sepsis risk-standardized mortality rate map for the United States, to illustrate disparities in sepsis care across the country. Methods This cross-sectional study included adults from the US Nationwide Inpatient Sample who were hospitalized with sepsis between 1 January 2010 and 30 December 2011. Hospital-level risk-standardized mortality rates were calculated using hierarchical logistic modelling, and were risk-adjusted with predicted mortality derived from (1) the Sepsis Risk Prediction Score, a logistic regression model, and (2) gradient-boosted decision trees, a supervised machine learning (ML) algorithm. Results Among 1,739,033 adults hospitalized with sepsis, 50% were female, and the median age was 71 years (interquartile range: 58–81). The national median risk-standardized mortality rate for sepsis was 18.4% (interquartile range: 17.0, 21.0) by the boosted tree model, which had better discrimination than the Sepsis Risk Prediction Score model (C-statistic 0.87 and 0.78, respectively). The highest risk-standardized mortality rates were found in Wyoming, North Dakota, and Mississippi, while the lowest were found in Arizona, Colorado, and Michigan. Conclusions Wide variation exists in sepsis risk-standardized mortality rates across states, representing opportunities for improvement in sepsis care. This represents the first map of state-level variation of risk-standardized mortality rates in sepsis.