Sepsis Treatment Update
Many thanks to Mike and Lisa Anderson for hosting, and to Sola, Dr. Febbo, Jessica, Trale, Adam B. and Natalie H. for their erudite presentations.
Background: The 2001 NEJM study by Rivers established a new standard for sepsis care, demonstrating a significant improvement in severe sepsis/septic shock mortality using a protocol driven care algorithm during the initial 6 hours of resuscitation. Since then, there has been ongoing discussion regarding which components of the algorithm are the most impactful.
Bottom line: Sepsis rates have decreased by nearly 50% since 2000, and this is likely a real finding, in part due to increased awareness and more aggressive treatment of sepsis, as well as to other improvements in critical care. The ProCESS trial reinforces the 4 most crucial elements of successful sepsis management: early recognition, early and adequate IV fluids, early IV antibiotics, and clinical reassessment of circulation.
Article 1: Kaukonen K, Bailey M et al. Mortality Related to Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock Among Critically Ill Patients in Australia and New Zealand, 2000-2012. JAMA.2014;311:1308-1316.
Editorial response: Iwashyna T, Angus DC. Declining Case Fatality Rates for Severe Sepsis: Good Data Brings Good News with Ambiguous Implications. JAMA.2014;311:1295-1297.
This retrospective observational study and accompanying editorial describe the changes in mortality for severe sepsis with and without shock in 101,064 patients from 171 ICUs in New Zealand and Australia between 2000 and 2012. The primary endpoint was hospital outcome (mortality and discharge home, to other hospital, or to rehab facility). Absolute mortality in severe sepsis decreased over this time period from 35% to 18.4%, for an annual average decrease of 1.3%. Interestingly, mortality also decreased at a similar rate in non-septic ICU patients over this time period. The annual rate of discharge to home was significantly greater in severe sepsis patients compared to patients with non-sepsis diagnoses.
As discussed in the editorial, reports of changes in disease incidence or mortality can be misleading and instead reflect increased disease awareness and more liberal testing. This study demonstrated robust methodology by using consistent international consensus definitions of sepsis over the time frame of the study, prospectively gathered data, and by attempting to control for confounding variables, all lending strength and veracity to its conclusions. This study points out the importance of taking into consideration overall improvements in care when evaluating new therapies, as a new drug’s “benefit” may be inflated due to an ongoing independent positive trend in outcomes. Also, short-term mortality by itself is an inadequate outcome metric, as a reduction in short-term mortality may come at the expense of trade-offs in morbidity and mortality. See Katie Burns for diagrams and an interpretive explanation.
Article 2: The ProCESS Investigators. A Randomized Trial of Protocol-Based Care for Early Septic Shock. NEJM March 18,2014.
Editorial response: Lily CM: The ProCESS Trial-A New Era of Sepsis Management. NEJM. March 18, 2014.
ACMC was an enrollment center for the ProCESS Trial, a non-blinded RCT of 1341 patients with septic shock, comparing 3 arms of care: EGDT (Early Goal Directed Therapy, Rivers algorithm with mandated central line and central hemodynamic monitoring, specific physiologic targets); less aggressive protocol based care (no mandated central line, emphasis on clinical assessment of perfusion); or treating doctor’s “usual care.” The primary end point was 60 day in-hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes included longer-term mortality and organ failure/need for organ support.
At 60 days, mortality was 21% in the EGDT group, 18.2% in the less aggressive protocol group, and 18.9% in usual care group. Protocols were not superior to usual care, and the EGDT protocol was not superior to the less aggressive protocol. There were also no significant differences in any secondary outcomes, except for a higher need for new dialysis in the less aggressive protocol group (6%) than in the EGDT (3.1%) and usual care (2.8%) groups.
In the initial 6 hours of care, IVF and pressor rates did vary between groups (most IVF in the less aggressive protocol group, more pressors in both protocol groups than in usual care group). More patients in EGDT group than in other 2 groups received inotropes and blood transfusions. Antibiotics and steroid use were similar across all groups.
Discussion at JC: The types of fluid/pressor were not specified, and neurologic outcome was not measured (although percentages of patients discharged to home were similar in the 3 groups). Patients in both of the protocol groups basically had their own resuscitation doctor for 6 hours as emergency physicians were on call to come to the hospital and provide dedicated care for these 2 groups of patients during the initial 6 hours of the study. This may reflect even better on the usual care group’s outcomes. For Febbo, interesting that the group receiving the most crystalloid also had the highest renal failure rate....hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis from high volume Normal Salineàrenal failure??
Although institutions enrolling patients in ProCESS were not supposed to be actively using a sepsis protocol prior to becoming involved in the trial, 70% of participating institutions did have an existing sepsis protocol. All groups in ProCESS received on average more than 2 liters of IVF prior to randomization, and 76% of patients received antibiotics prior to randomization, reflecting knowledge of EGDT in physicians treating “usual care” patients.
The 18% mortality rate in the “usual care” group of ProCESS is a dramatic improvement in baseline mortality compared with the 46.5% control group mortality in Rivers’ trial. General improvements in critical care have also likely been impactful, including more liberal transfusion thresholds, lung protective ventilation strategies, and moderate glucose control.
So, do we need sepsis protocols at all? Critical care resuscitation is complex. Especially for residents and physicians with infrequent experience treating sepsis, protocols provide useful reminders of treatment goals and therapies. Moving forward, the traditional EGDT protocol will likely evolve, with less pressure to insert central lines and measure CVP/ScvO2 unless the patient requires vasopressors. However, reassessing perfusion using serial lactates, Shock Index, and clinical parameters including urine output and mentation remains critical.