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Concordance Between Initial Presumptive and Final Adjudicated Diagnoses of Infection Among Patients Meeting Sepsis-3 Criteria in the Emergency Department

Authors :
Gabriel A Hooper
Carolyn J Klippel
Sierra R McLean
Edward A Stenehjem
Brandon J Webb
Emily R Murnin
Catherine L Hough
Joseph R Bledsoe
Samuel M Brown
Ithan D Peltan
Source :
Clinical Infectious Diseases.
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2023.

Abstract

BackgroundGuidelines emphasize rapid antibiotic treatment for sepsis, but infection presence is often uncertain at initial presentation. We investigated the incidence and drivers of false-positive presumptive infection diagnosis among emergency department (ED) patients meeting Sepsis-3 criteria.MethodsFor a retrospective cohort of patients hospitalized after meeting Sepsis-3 criteria (acute organ failure and suspected infection including blood cultures drawn and intravenous antimicrobials administered) in 1 of 4 EDs from 2013 to 2017, trained reviewers first identified the ED-diagnosed source of infection and adjudicated the presence and source of infection on final assessment. Reviewers subsequently adjudicated final infection probability for a randomly selected 10% subset of subjects. Risk factors for false-positive infection diagnosis and its association with 30-day mortality were evaluated using multivariable regression.ResultsOf 8267 patients meeting Sepsis-3 criteria in the ED, 699 (8.5%) did not have an infection on final adjudication and 1488 (18.0%) patients with confirmed infections had a different source of infection diagnosed in the ED versus final adjudication (ie, initial/final source diagnosis discordance). Among the subset of patients whose final infection probability was adjudicated (n = 812), 79 (9.7%) had only “possible” infection and 77 (9.5%) were not infected. Factors associated with false-positive infection diagnosis included hypothermia, altered mental status, comorbidity burden, and an “unknown infection source” diagnosis in the ED (odds ratio: 6.39; 95% confidence interval: 5.14–7.94). False-positive infection diagnosis was not associated with 30-day mortality.ConclusionsIn this large multihospital study

Details

ISSN :
15376591 and 10584838
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Infectious Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6e222f2b76615eefe10441059995e74f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciad101