Evaluation of an Intensive Care Unit Sepsis Alert in Critically Ill Medical Patients

Author:

Rich Rebecca L.1,Montero Jennifer M.2,Dillon Kyle E.3,Condon Patrick4,Vadaparampil Mathew5

Affiliation:

1. Rebecca L. Rich is a critical care clinical pharmacy specialist, Department of Pharmacy, Lakeland Regional Health, Lakeland, Florida.

2. Jennifer M. Montero is a quality clinical pharmacy specialist and sepsis coordinator, Department of Clinical Quality, Lakeland Regional Health.

3. Kyle E. Dillon is a critical care clinical pharmacy specialist, Department of Pharmacy, Lakeland Regional Health.

4. Patrick Condon is an emergency medicine clinical pharmacy specialist, Department of Pharmacy, Orlando Health, Orlando, Florida.

5. Mathew Vadaparampil is a pulmonary critical care intensivist, Department of Critical Care Medicine, Lakeland Regional Health.

Abstract

Background Sepsis alerts commonly used for intensive care unit (ICU) patients can lead to alert fatigue because these patients generally meet 1 or more of the criteria for systemic inflammatory response syndrome. To identify ICU patients at greatest risk for sepsis-related consequences, an ICU-specific sepsis alert was implemented. Objective To evaluate an ICU sepsis alert based on modified criteria for systemic inflammatory response syndrome among critically ill medical patients. Methods This retrospective evaluation was conducted at a comprehensive tertiary referral center. Patients included were at least 18 years old, were admitted to the critical care medicine service, and had at least 1 sepsis alert between January 1 and February 29, 2020. The sepsis alert identified patients meeting at least 2 modified systemic inflammatory response syndrome criteria (white blood cell count, <4000/μL or >12 000/μL; body temperature, <36 °C or >38.3 °C; heart rate, >110/min; and respiratory rate, >21/min), with at least 1 of the 2 criteria being white blood cell count or body temperature. Results For 128 alerts evaluated, the positive predictive value was 72%. Of 713 patients who were admitted to the critical care medicine service and did not have a sepsis alert, 7 received a sepsis diagnosis. The ICU sepsis alert had a negative predictive value of 99%, sensitivity of 92.9%, and specificity of 95.1%. Conclusions An ICU sepsis alert using modified systemic inflammatory response syndrome criteria was effective for identifying sepsis in critically ill medical patients.

Publisher

AACN Publishing

Reference20 articles.

1. Sepsis. World Health Organization. August 26, 2020. Accessed January 24, 2023. https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/sepsis

2. What is sepsis? Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Accessed January 24, 2023. https://www.cdc.gov/sepsis

3. Surviving Sepsis Campaign: international guidelines for management of sepsis and septic shock: 2016;Rhodes;Crit Care Med,2017

4. Antibiotic timing and outcomes in sepsis;Kim;Am J Med Sci,2018

5. Duration of hypotension before initiation of effective antimicrobial therapy is the critical determinant of survival in human septic shock;Kumar;Crit Care Med,2006

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