SGEM#346: Sepsis – You Were Always on My Mind

The Skeptics Guide to Emergency Medicine - Un podcast de Dr. Ken Milne

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Date: September 20th, 2021 Reference: Litell et al. Most emergency department patients meeting sepsis criteria are not diagnosed with sepsis at discharge. AEM 2021. Guest Skeptic: Dr. Jess Monas is a Consultant in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the Mayo Clinic Hospital, Phoenix, Arizona. She is also an Assistant Professor, Department of Emergency Medicine Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine in Scottsdale, Arizona. Jess also does the ultra summaries for EMRAP. Case: A 60-year-old man presents to the emergency department with a non-productive cough and increasing shortness of breath.  He has a history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), hypertension (HTN), congestive heart failure (CHF), and benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH).  He’s afebrile.  He has a heart rate of 93 beats per minute, a blood pressure of 145/90 mm Hg, respiratory rate of 24 breaths per minute, and an oxygen saturation of 92% on room air. Initial labs come back with a slightly decreased platelet count (149) and a minimally elevated creatinine (1.21 mg/dl or 107 umol/L).  He triggers a sepsis alert, and you get a pop-up suggesting IV antibiotics and 30cc/kg of IV fluids.  So, you ask yourself, is this guy really septic and should we bypass those fluids? Background: We have covered sepsis many times on the SGEM since 2012.  This has included the three large RCTs published in 2014-15 comparing early goal-directed therapy (EGDT) to usual care. All three showed no statistical difference between the two treatments for their primary outcome (SGEM#69, SGEM#92 and SGEM#113). There was also SGEM#174 which said don’t believe the hype around a Vitamin C Cocktail that was being promoted as a cure for sepsis and SGEM#207 which showed prehospital administration of IV antibiotics did improve time to get them in patients with suspected sepsis, but did not improve all-cause mortality.  The SGEM was part of a group of clinicians who were concerned about the updated 2018 Surviving Sepsis Campaign (SSC) guidelines. Specifically, the fluid, antibiotics, and pressor requirements within the first hour of being triaged in the emergency department. Despite the lack of high-quality evidence to support these sepsis bundles, many hospitals incorporated them into their electronic medical record (EMR).  They created these sepsis alerts with the intention of identifying septic patients, so they can be treated accordingly.  Most physicians agree that antibiotics should be given early in septic patients.  However, the jury is still out for other interventions with potential for harm, particularly, the infusion of 30cc/kg of IV fluids. Worldwide sepsis contributes to the death of 5.3 million hospitalized people annually.  It is the leading cause of death in the intensive care unit (ICU) in the US and the most expensive diagnosis.  Since 2015, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) have indexed the quality of hospital care for sepsis to the SEP-1 core measure.  Interventions, particularly early antibiotics, have been associated with improved mortality. Diagnosing sepsis can be challenging.  To adequately capture patients,

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