Impact of Body Temperature Abnormalities on the Implementation of Sepsis Bundles and Outcomes in Patients With Severe Sepsis: A Retrospective Sub-Analysis of the Focused Outcome Research on Emergency Care for Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Sepsis and Trauma Study
OBJECTIVES:To investigate the impact of body temperature on disease severity, implementation of sepsis bundles, and outcomes in severe sepsis patients. DESIGN:Retrospective sub-analysis. SETTING:Fifty-nine ICUs in Japan, from January 2016 to March 2017. PATIENTS:Adult patients with severe sepsis bas...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Critical care medicine 2019-05, Vol.47 (5), p.691-699 |
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Zusammenfassung: | OBJECTIVES:To investigate the impact of body temperature on disease severity, implementation of sepsis bundles, and outcomes in severe sepsis patients.
DESIGN:Retrospective sub-analysis.
SETTING:Fifty-nine ICUs in Japan, from January 2016 to March 2017.
PATIENTS:Adult patients with severe sepsis based on Sepsis-2 were enrolled and divided into three categories (body temperature < 36°C, 36–38°C, > 38°C), using the core body temperature at ICU admission.
INTERVENTIONS:None.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:Compliance with the bundles proposed in the Surviving Sepsis Campaign Guidelines 2012, in-hospital mortality, disposition after discharge, and the number of ICU and ventilator-free days were evaluated. Of 1,143 enrolled patients, 127, 565, and 451 were categorized as having body temperature less than 36°C, 36–38°C, and greater than 38°C, respectively. Hypothermia—body temperature less than 36°C—was observed in 11.1% of patients. Patients with hypothermia were significantly older than those with a body temperature of 36–38°C or greater than 38°C and had a lower body mass index and higher prevalence of septic shock than those with body temperature greater than 38°C. Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II and Sequential Organ Failure Assessment scores on the day of enrollment were also significantly higher in hypothermia patients. Implementation rates of the entire 3-hour bundle and administration of broad-spectrum antibiotics significantly differed across categories; implementation rates were significantly lower in patients with body temperature less than 36°C than in those with body temperature greater than 38°C. Implementation rate of the entire 3-hour resuscitation bundle + vasopressor use + remeasured lactate significantly differed across categories, as did the in-hospital and 28-day mortality. The odds ratio for in-hospital mortality relative to the reference range of body temperature greater than 38°C was 1.760 (95% CI, 1.134–2.732) in the group with hypothermia. The proportions of ICU-free and ventilator-free days also significantly differed between categories and were significantly smaller in patients with hypothermia.
CONCLUSIONS:Hypothermia was associated with a significantly higher disease severity, mortality risk, and lower implementation of sepsis bundles. |
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ISSN: | 0090-3493 1530-0293 |
DOI: | 10.1097/CCM.0000000000003688 |