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Critical care medicine · May 2011
Comparative StudyIs worsening multiple organ failure the cause of death in patients with severe sepsis?
- Jean-Louis Vincent, David R Nelson, and Mark D Williams.
- Department of Intensive Care, Erasme Hospital, Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium. jlvincen@ulb.ac.be
- Crit. Care Med. 2011 May 1; 39 (5): 1050-5.
ObjectivesAlthough the mortality of severe sepsis is easily quantified, the actual cause and timing of death from severe sepsis are less defined. We used the INDEPTH (International Integrated Database for the Evaluation of Severe Sepsis and Drotrecogin alfa activated) database to investigate the reported cause of death in patients with severe sepsis.DesignRetrospective database analysis.PatientsData from 4459 patients with severe sepsis (drotrecogin alfa activated, n = 3228; placebo, n = 1231) included in five clinical trials conducted in tertiary care institutions in 28 countries.Measurements And Main ResultsWe examined the cause of death and the pattern of Sequential Organ Failure Assessment scores near the time of death. We also evaluated the time course of biomarker levels at this late stage. A total of 1201 (27.0%) patients died during the 28-day study period. The main causes of death were as follows: sepsis-associated multiple organ failure (43.1%), refractory septic shock (22.6%), and respiratory failure (13.0%). There were no significant differences in the distributions of cause of death between drotrecogin alfa activated and placebo patients, so that all patients were combined for analysis. The mean cardiovascular Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score increased from 2.4, 4 days before death, to 2.9, 1 day before death, and the mean respiratory Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score increased from 2.6, 4 days before death, to 2.9, 1 day before death. The increase in these individual Sequential Organ Failure Assessment scores was more prominent in patients who died early (day 0-5). Protein C levels decreased and interleukin-6 levels increased in the days before death.ConclusionPatients with severe sepsis typically die of multiple organ failure, refractory shock, or respiratory failure. Persistent, more than worsening, organ failure is the more common pattern before death.
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