Author:
Wada Takeshi,Yamakawa Kazuma,Kabata Daijiro,Abe Toshikazu,Ogura Hiroshi,Shiraishi Atsushi,Saitoh Daizoh,Kushimoto Shigeki,Fujishima Seitaro,Mayumi Toshihiko,Hifumi Toru,Shiino Yasukazu,Nakada Taka-aki,Tarui Takehiko,Otomo Yasuhiro,Okamoto Kohji,Umemura Yutaka,Kotani Joji,Sakamoto Yuichiro,Sasaki Junichi,Shiraishi Shin-ichiro,Takuma Kiyotsugu,Tsuruta Ryosuke,Hagiwara Akiyoshi,Masuno Tomohiko,Takeyama Naoshi,Yamashita Norio,Ikeda Hiroto,Ueyama Masashi,Fujimi Satoshi,Gando Satoshi
Abstract
AbstractDisseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) is one of the major organ dysfunctions associated with sepsis. This retrospective secondary analysis comprised data from a prospective multicenter study to investigate the age-related differences in the survival benefit of anticoagulant therapy in sepsis according to the DIC diagnostic criteria. Adult patients with severe sepsis based on the Sepsis-2 criteria were enrolled and divided into the following groups: (1) anticoagulant group (patients who received anticoagulant therapy) and (2) non-anticoagulant group (patients who did not receive anticoagulant therapy). Patients in the former group were administered antithrombin, recombinant human thrombomodulin, or their combination. The increases in the risk of hospital mortality were suppressed in the high-DIC-score patients aged 60–70 years receiving anticoagulant therapy. No favorable association of anti-coagulant therapy with hospital mortality was observed in patients aged 50 years and 80 years. Furthermore, anticoagulant therapy in the lower-DIC-score range increased the risk of hospital mortality in patients aged 50–60 years. In conclusion, anticoagulant therapy was associated with decreased hospital mortality according to a higher DIC score in septic patients aged 60–70 years. Anticoagulant therapy, however, was not associated with a better outcome in relatively younger and older patients with sepsis.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC