Blood culture positive sepsis in England, 2017-2018: epidemiological assessment of the commissioning for quality and innovation (CQUIN) sepsis indicator.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Ranya Mulchandani, Simon Packer, Joshua Howkins, Carla Robinson, Theresa Lamagni, Alex Bhattacharya, Rosy Reynolds, Andre Charlett, Colin Brown, Russell Hope, Susan Hopkins, Isabel Oliver
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Sepsis remains a significant clinical and public health concern, necessitating timely identification and targeted management for improved patient outcomes. This study describes the epidemiology of sepsis in emergency department attendees across England by analysing a unique multi-site linked dataset to inform approaches to strengthen surveillance and improve our understanding of clinical outcomes.

Methods: An existent study dataset was utilised comprising a sample of paediatric and adult emergency department admissions screened for community-onset sepsis in the Commissioning for Quality and Innovation (CQUIN) program in the 2017/18 financial year linked to Hospital Episode Statistics and Office for National Statistics death registrations. This dataset was linked to the United Kingdom Health Security Agency's Second-Generation Surveillance System for microbiological data. Descriptive analyses were conducted to characterise sepsis screen positives and negatives in CQUIN, including demographic characteristics, clinical presentations, microbiological profiles, and clinical outcomes.

Results: Of the 4,027 sepsis-screened emergency admissions included, 2,454 (60.9%) were sepsis screen positive under the CQUIN indicator. Only 11.2% (453/4,027) had a positive blood culture within 2 days of hospital admission. Blood culture positivity rates were 15.2% (373/2,454) and 5.1% (80/1,573) for sepsis screen positive and negative in CQUIN, respectively. Monomicrobial episodes predominated (86.5%), with Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus species being the most commonly isolated bacteria. The study showed a case fatality rate of 17.1% (420/2,454) for sepsis screen positive in CQUIN but revealed no significant difference in all-cause 30-day mortality between sepsis screen positives in CQUIN with and without positive blood cultures. Sepsis screen positives in CQUIN with a focal site of infection code were more likely to have positive blood cultures, except for respiratory infections.

Conclusions: This study provides novel insights into the epidemiology of sepsis screening in emergency departments across England, highlighting variability in blood culture positivity rates and microbial profiles. The findings underscore the importance of enhanced surveillance strategies, optimised screening protocols, tailored antimicrobial stewardship practices, and quality improvement initiatives to optimise sepsis management and outcomes. Systemic approaches are needed to address knowledge gaps and inform evidence-based interventions for sepsis care.

2017-2018年英国血培养阳性脓毒症:质量与创新(CQUIN)脓毒症指标调试的流行病学评估
背景:脓毒症仍然是一个重要的临床和公共卫生问题,需要及时识别和有针对性的管理,以改善患者的预后。本研究通过分析一个独特的多站点链接数据集,描述了英国急诊科患者败血症的流行病学,以告知加强监测和提高我们对临床结果的理解的方法。方法:利用现有的研究数据集,包括2017/18财政年度与医院事件统计和国家统计局死亡登记相关的质量与创新委托(CQUIN)计划中筛查社区发病败血症的儿科和成人急诊科入院样本。该数据集与英国卫生安全局的第二代微生物数据监测系统相关联。描述性分析用于描述CQUIN患者脓毒症筛查阳性和阴性的特征,包括人口统计学特征、临床表现、微生物谱和临床结果。结果:纳入的4027例败血症筛查急诊入院患者中,2454例(60.9%)在CQUIN指标下败血症筛查呈阳性。只有11.2%(453/4,027)在入院2天内血培养呈阳性。CQUIN脓毒症筛查阳性和阴性血培养阳性率分别为15.2%(373/ 2454)和5.1%(80/ 1573)。单菌感染占主导地位(86.5%),大肠杆菌和葡萄球菌是最常见的分离细菌。该研究显示,CQUIN脓毒症筛查阳性的病死率为17.1%(420/ 2454),但血液培养阳性的CQUIN脓毒症筛查阳性患者的全因30天死亡率无显著差异。脓毒症筛查阳性的CQUIN患者,除呼吸道感染外,血培养阳性的可能性更大。结论:这项研究为英国急诊室脓毒症筛查的流行病学提供了新的见解,强调了血液培养阳性率和微生物谱的可变性。研究结果强调了加强监测策略、优化筛查方案、量身定制的抗菌药物管理实践和质量改进举措对优化败血症管理和结果的重要性。需要系统的方法来解决知识差距,并为败血症护理提供循证干预措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BMC Infectious Diseases
BMC Infectious Diseases 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
860
审稿时长
3.3 months
期刊介绍: BMC Infectious Diseases is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of the prevention, diagnosis and management of infectious and sexually transmitted diseases in humans, as well as related molecular genetics, pathophysiology, and epidemiology.
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