Skip to main content

Sepsis Care Discrepancy Found Between United States, Europe


Patients with sepsis or septic shock admitted to European intensive care units (ICUs) were more severely ill and had a 10% higher raw mortality rate compared with patients admitted to US ICUs, according to results from a comparison study published onlineOctober 26 in the Lancet Infectious Diseases. After adjusting for organ dysfunction and severity of illness, however, the mortality rates were comparable.
Mitchell M. Levy, MD, from the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, and international colleagues analyzed the records of 25,375 patients in US (18,766 patients) and European (6609 patients) hospitals who were admitted to 107 US hospital ICUs and 79 ICUs in Europe between January 2005 and January 2010.
Their primary goal was to assess whether hospitals were complying with international, evidence-based guidelines for resuscitation and management under the Surviving Sepsis Campaign (SSC). "Rates of compliance with sepsis care measures differed significantly between regions," the researchers write. For all applicable elements of SSC, US hospitals were more compliant (difference, 3.2%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.2% - 4.4%), whereas European hospitals were more compliant with the management elements of SSC (difference, 8.4%; 95% CI, 7.2% - 9.7%).
However, it was the difference in raw mortality rates, the researchers write, that "raises important questions." In unadjusted results, the odds of hospital death were 51% to 65% higher in Europe (P < .0001). Overall unadjusted hospital mortality was higher in Europe than in the United States (41.1% vs 28.3%; difference, 12.8%, 95% CI, 11.5% - 14.7%).
Pneumonia was the primary cause of sepsis in all patients, and on ICU admission, most patients had multiple organ failure and required mechanical ventilation. A higher percentage of US patients had more single-organ failures than patients in European hospitals. Overall, 8032 deaths (32%) occurred among 25,375 patients.
Most patients admitted to US ICUs came directly from emergency departments, whereas most European patients were admitted to ICUs from regular hospital wards. The researchers found that median lengths of stay were longer in Europe (difference, 3.6 days [95% CI, 3.3 - 3.7 days] for ICU stays; difference, 12.3 days [95% CI, 11.9 - 12.8 days] for hospital stays).
"These results raise important questions about the effect of the approach to critical care in Europe compared with that in the USA," Dr. Levy said in a news release. "Given the higher number of ICU beds per head in the USA than in Europe, more patients with less serious cases of sepsis might be admitted to the ICU. However, this is not at all clear from existing research, and further investigation is urgently needed if we are to be able to accurately monitor, and ultimately improve, sepsis care."
"The investigators identified important international differences in processes and outcomes of care, which, taken together, provide a convincing argument for the need to address variation in structure and process to reduce mortality from this lethal and complex disease," Julian Bion, MBBS, from the Queen Elizabeth Hospital and University of Birmingham, United Kingdom, writes in an accompanying commentary.
Limitations of the study include the fact that it was not a randomized study and that only patients admitted to ICUs were included, the researchers write. Data on patients just admitted to wards who were either treated and released or died were unavailable. In addition, the number of available ICU beds can vary among European countries and the United States.
Nevertheless, the researchers conclude, "[P]atients admitted to the ICU with severe sepsis and septic shock in Europe were more severely ill than those in the USA and had a 10% higher unadjusted mortality rate. This difference disappeared after adjustment for severity of illness and organ dysfunction. Patients admitted to ICUs with severe sepsis in Europe were also more frequently admitted from hospital wards, whereas those in the USA were more likely to be admitted directly to ICUs. This study raises questions about the effect of the different models of ICU resourcing and use."
This research was supported by Eli Lilly, Baxter Lifesciences, Philips Medical Systems, the Society of Critical Care Medicine, and the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine. One coauthor has reported receiving reimbursement for steering committee work by Eli Lilly and by Orion Pharma, has been a member of the advisory board of LiDCO and bioMérieux, and has received lecture fees from LiDCO and Edwards Lifesciences. One coauthor's department and institution have received payment for research support and honoraria from Eli Lilly and Philips Medical Systems. The other authors and the editorialist have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

Comments

  1. My partner and I absolutely love your blog and find the majority of your post's to be what precisely I'm looking for.

    Would you offer guest writers to write content for you personally?
    I wouldn't mind composing a post or elaborating on a lot of the subjects you write concerning here. Again, awesome blog!
    Feel free to visit my web site : natural penis extender

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Contact Precautions May Have Unintended Consequences

Contact precautions, including gloves, gowns, and isolated rooms, have helped stem the transmission of hospital pathogens but have also had some negative consequences, according to findings from a new study. Healthcare worker (HCWs) visited patients on contact precautions less frequently than other patients and spent less time with those patients when they did visit, report Daniel J. Morgan, MD, from the University of Maryland School of Medicine and the Veterans Affairs (VA) Maryland Health Care System, Baltimore, and colleagues. Moreover, patients on contact precautions also received fewer outside visitors. "Less contact with HCWs suggests that other unintended consequences of contact precautions still exist," Dr. Morgan and coauthors write. "The resulting decrease in HCW contact may lead to increased adverse events and a lower quality of patient care due to less consistent patient monitoring and poorer adherence to standard adverse event prevention methods (such...

Obama Renominates Tavenner to Be CMS Chief

President Barack Obama yesterday renominated Marilyn Tavenner, the acting administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), to serve in that post without the caveat of "acting" attached to it. If the Senate approves her nomination, Tavenner will be the first confirmed, full-fledged CMS administrator since Mark McClellan, MD, PhD, stepped down from that position in October 2006, during the George W. Bush administration. Dr. McClellan's successors either were acting administrators or, in the case of Donald Berwick, MD, who was Tavenner's immediate predecessor, a recess appointment. As illustrated by Dr. Berwick's  CMS history , Senate confirmation can be tough to get when one party has enough votes to filibuster and otherwise stymie a nomination by an opposing party's president. That was the case when Obama nominated Dr. Berwick, whom Senate Republicans portrayed as an advocate of healthcare rationing, a characterization denied by t...

Secondary Prevention: Clinical Approaches to Managing the Higher-Risk Patient with Heart Disease

INCIDENCE/PREVALENCE/BURDENS ASSOCIATED WITH CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE (CVD) The prevention of an initial and recurrent cardiovascular event and other complications, such as diabetes and kidney failure [also known as end-stage renal disease (ESRD) or chronic kidney disease (CKD) stage 5] is an important goal in patients with a history of CVD. Each year, approximately 185,000 Americans suffer a recurrent stroke, approximately 470,000 will have a recurrent coronary attack, and an estimated 325,000 will suffer a recurrent myocardial infarction. [1]  Secondary prevention strategies offer the opportunity to prevent further complications and improve outcomes by early detection and management of common comorbidities. The burden on public health and the costs associated with chronic illnesses such as CVD, CKD, and diabetes remain high. An estimated 82.6 million American adults (1 in 3) have 1 or more types of CVD. [1]  Heart failure is the fastest-growing clinical cardiac disease ...