Guías Médicas por Condición
Sepsis
The development of sepsis is associated with a very high in-hospital mortality. In fact, 1 (or more) in 3 hospital deaths are sepsis-related.
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Sepsis is one of the most serious conditions in the United States, with approximately 250,000 annual deaths. The estimated annual cost of sepsis readmissions is >$3.5 billion.
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Additionally, post-acute care use and hospital readmissions are common after sepsis. The increased readmission risk after sepsis was observed regardless of sepsis severity and was associated with adverse readmission outcomes.
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Sepsis 30-day readmissions are twice as likely to die or enroll into hospice compared to non-sepsis readmission.
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Despite this, hospice is inadequately utilized for sepsis patients. In one study, 40% of sepsis deaths met hospice eligibility guidelines at the time of hospital admission.
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Any patient with advanced illness and a clinical complication of sepsis is a candidate for a goals-of-care discussion and the consideration of hospice services.
Clinical Progression of Sepsis
The clinical course of sepsis can be divided into pre-sepsis, sepsis and post-sepsis, with patients generally following a trajectory based on underlying health status.
Important determinants of status pre-sepsis include:
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Nutritional, functional and cognitive status
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Symptom burden in conjunction with:
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Medical factors (multi-morbidity and advanced illness)
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Contextual factors (healthcare utilization and social determinants of health)
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Pathogenic factors (virulence, load and antibiotic susceptibility)
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Sepsis-related determinants include clinical manifestations plus some degree of system dysregulation. Clinical manifestations:
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Respiratory failure
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Circulatory shock
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Renal injury
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Delirium
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Metabolic changes
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Coagulopathy
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Liver injury
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Increased lactate
The most common advanced illnesses associated with sepsis-related hospital deaths include:
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Metastatic cancer
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NYHA class III/IV heart failure
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Advanced lung disease (defined as SOB at rest or with minimal exertion, with or without oxygen)
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Dementia with any difficulty in ADLs
The more clinical factors or organ dysfunction present, the higher the in-hospital mortality due to sepsis. Clinical complications include:
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Vasopressors
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Mechanical ventilation
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Hyperlactemia
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Acute kidney injury
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Hepatic injury
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Thrombocytopenia
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Hospice Eligibility:
Sepsis-related complications, particularly organ dysfunction, should trigger goals of care conversations, especially when the patient has an end-stage condition such as cancer (solid tumor or hematologic), heart disease, lung disease or dementia.
Patients with functional and cognitive impairments pre-sepsis are significantly more likely to die after hospital discharge than those patients who are functionally and cognitively intact—and should be referred to hospice.
Patients who survive hospital-incurred sepsis often develop decrements in health status along with disease exacerbation such as impaired cardiac or lung function, refractory delirium/cognitive impairment, or dysphagia. As noted above, ED utilization and hospital readmission are common upon hospital discharge.
It is incumbent upon the hospital to delineate the most appropriate post-acute care site: skilled nursing, home health or hospice. Those patients eligible for hospice have an underlying advanced illness or, prior to sepsis, had an underlying physical disability or cognitive impairment.
Hospital Inpatient:
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Hospice eligible, not previously identified
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Cancer-solid tumor and hematologic
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Heart disease
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Lung disease
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Dementia
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Clinical complications of sepsis
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Vasopressors
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Mechanical ventilation
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Hyperlactemia
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Acute kidney injury
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Hepatic injury
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Thrombocytopenia
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At Hospital Discharge
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Hospice eligible, not previously identified
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Cancer-solid tumor and hematologic
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Heart disease
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Lung disease
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Dementia
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Pre-hospital functional ability
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Physical impairment
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1 or 6 ADL's or 1 or 5 ADL's
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Cognitive status
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Any degree of dementia
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CMS Medicare provides these guidelines as a convenient tool. They do not take the place of a physician's professional judgment.
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