National Clinical Lead Sepsis Bone 1996 Control inflammation - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
National Clinical Lead Sepsis Bone 1996 Control inflammation - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Dr Vida Hamilton FCARCSI FJFICMI National Clinical Lead Sepsis Bone 1996 Control inflammation improve outcome Multiple studies Steroids Anti- TNF Anti-IL1 Anti-IL6 Other monoclonal antibodies At best no
Bone 1996
Control inflammation – improve outcome Multiple studies
- Steroids
- Anti- TNF
- Anti-IL1
- Anti-IL6
- Other monoclonal antibodies
At best – no improvement Often – increased mortality
NEJM 2003
Regulated
- Innate & Adaptive
Cellular: Dendritic cells, T-cells, B-cells PAMPs that bind TLR 2,3,4, Mannin-binding lecithin receptors (DAMPs) Molecular: complement, acute phase, cytokines Anti-viral: Interfon, local cellular immunity, apoptosis
Micro-organism
- Virulence
- Innoculation dose
- Multi-drug resistance
Host
- Genetic polymorphisms
- Co-morbidities
Age Chronic health status Immuno-modulatory medications
Hotchkiss 2013
Multi-organ dysfunction then failure
- Little necrosis
- Apoptosis of the cellular immune system
- ‘Hibernation’ theory
D4 Lymphopenia HLA – DR expression
- Eosinopenia – Eckhart 1890’s
Recrudescence of latent viruses
- CMV, HSV
New therapies
- ‘Stimulate immune system – improve outcome’
- GM-CSF
- SOFA score Rise ≥ 2 points
- Respiration
Coagulation
- Liver
Cardiovascular
- CNS
Renal
qSOFA
2/3
- RR> 22, Altered Mental status, SBP <100
1o outcome: increased specificity in predicting Mortality > 10%; ICU LOS > 3 days
Not a trigger to treat Identifies a cohort of patients with high risk of
mortality and intensive care requirement
Trigger to treat remains
- INFECTION +
SYSTEMIC INFLAMMATION and/ or NEW ONSET ORGAN DYSFUNCTION
Common Sepsis:
330 per 100,000 per annum
AMI:
208 per 100,000 per annum
Mortality: 20 - 55% 2013: 187 cases per 100,000
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% 0-14 Years 15-34 Years 35-44 Years 45-54 Years 55-64 Years 65-74 Years 75-84 Years 85+ Years
Mortality Rate
0.0% 5.0% 10.0% 15.0% 20.0% 25.0% 30.0% 35.0% 40.0% 45.0% 50.0%
0-14 Years 15-34 Years 35-44 Years 45-54 Years 55-64 Years 65-74 Years 75-84 Years 85+ Years Mortality Rate
5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 < 44 years 45 - 64 65 - 84 >= 85 Australia Ireland
Recognised outcome measures of acute care
quality
Number per annum Mortality Change in Mortality 2004 - 2013 AMI
6125 6.4% 40%
- H. Stroke
1456 26%
- I. Stroke
4485 10% 13.6%
Sepsis
9859 20.4%
90% of cases with poor outcome in
the Australian sepsis database, inadequate recognition was found to be the most common feature
The categorisation of the severity of a
patients illness
The early detection of that deterioration The use of a standardised and structured
communication tool such as ISBAR
Early medical review that is prompted by
evidence based trigger points
A definite escalation plan that is monitored
and audited on a regular basis
Sepsis is increasing in incidence It is expensive, health and financial Patients who receive
- Oxygen
- Antimicrobials
- IV fluids
Within 1 hour in severe sepsis Compliant < 20% mortality Non-compliant > 30%
Give 3 Take 3
1.OXYGEN: Titrate O2 to saturations
- f 94 -98% or 88-92% in chronic lung
disease.
- 1. CULTURES: Take blood cultures
before giving antimicrobials (if no significant delay i.e. >45 minutes) and consider source control.
- 2. FLUIDS: Start IV fluid resuscitation
if evidence of hypovolaemia. 500ml bolus of isotonic crystalloid over 15mins & give up to 30ml/kg, reassessing for signs of hypovolaemia, euvolaemia, or fluid overload. 2.BLOODS: Check point of care lactate & full blood count. Other tests and investigations as per history and examination.
- 3. ANTIMICROBIALS: Give IV
antimicrobials according to local antimicrobial guidelines.
- 3. URINE OUTPUT: Assess urine
- utput
It is a continuum Infection
- Pathological invasion of a normally sterile site
Sepsis Severe sepsis Septic shock Multi-organ failure
General variables
- T
- C, HR, RR, WCC, BSL, Mental status
Inflammatory variables
- CRP, Procalcitonin
Organ dysfunction variables Tissue hypo-perfusion variables
- Lactate, CRT
Haemodynamic insufficiency variables
- Sys BP <90, MAP < 65, CO
New onset organ dysfunction Worsening organ dysfunction
- Due to infection
SIRS SOFA Treatment
- O2/ Ventilation
Cultures/source control
- IV fluids/ pressors
Tests/ investigations
- Antimicrobials Urine output/ other organs
Re-assess Repeat lactate if the 1st was abnormal (or if
patient deteriorates)
Apply vasopressors for hypotension not
responding to fluid resuscitation
- CVC
- Arterial line
Repeat lactate as clinically indicated
Trzeciak et al; Intensive Care Med (2007) 33:970–977
NEJM 2003
Figure 3. Mean hospital mortality among patients with decreased lactate within 8 hours of index test, stratified by total fluid received in increments of 7.5 ml/kg based on medication administration record.
Annals ATS, 2013 http://www.atsjournals.org/doi/abs/10.1513/AnnalsATS.201304-099OC
Respiratory
38%
Urinary tract
21%
Intra-abdominal
16.5%
CRBSI
2.3%
Device
1.3%
CNS
0.8%
Others
11.3%
Reduces the relative risk of death by
46.6%
1 additional life saved for every 5 care
episodes
Mortality reduced from 44% to 20%
Daniels et al, Emergency medicine journal 2011
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Oct-14 Nov-14 Dec-14 Jan-15 Feb-15 Mar-15 Apr-15 May-15 Jun-15 Percent in Compliance
Inital Sepsis Bundle
Serum lactate within 3 Hrs Blood Culture before Antibiotics Antibiotic Compliance Fluids for hypotension or elevated lactate
Bacteria, viruses, fungi, parasites Sepsis is the common fatal pathway H1N1 – Immunocompromised host
Elderly Co-morbidities Pregnant
Presented with organ failure Treatment supportive, anti-virals Vaccinate – prevention better than cure
Black death
- Famine induced immuno-compromised host
- Poverty, lack of knowledge
Spanish ‘flu
- Pathogen mutation – increased virulence
- War, mass movement, lack of knowledge
EVD
- Poverty, lack of knowledge, cultural practice
Hand hygiene/ Sanitation / Education
High or very low temperature Fast heart rate Fast respiratory rate Little urine output Altered mental state Severe leg pain ‘I feel like I am dying’
- Survivors self reported symptoms and signs
- UK Sepsis trust
Source control
- Drainage
- Debridement
Responding
- Stabilisation
De-escalation
Decrease mortality x 20% over 5 yrs Decrease chronic sequelae More efficient use of limited
healthcare resources
Promote preventative practices
Guideline 2014 Implementation 2015 Pathways
- Paramedic
- Maternity
- Paediatrics
- Primary care
- Prison service
- Nursing homes
Awareness
- Hospital site visits
- Community awareness
Education
- Undergraduate,
- Postgraduate
- National intern training
- (Safe start programme)
- E-learning
- Smart phone app
National Sepsis Outcome Report
- Incidence
- Mortality rate
- Median LOS
- ICU admission rate
Compliance audit
- Clinical decision support tool usage
- Time to 1st dose antimicrobials