Danai Pajman A, Moss Marc, Mannino David M, Martin Greg S
Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA 30303, USA.
Chest. 2006 Jun;129(6):1432-40. doi: 10.1378/chest.129.6.1432.
To evaluate the longitudinal epidemiology of sepsis in patients with a history of cancer and to specifically examine sepsis-related disparities in risk or outcome.
Sepsis cases from 1979 through 2001 using a nationally representative sample of nonfederal acute-care hospitalizations in the United States (the National Hospital Discharge Survey) integrated with cancer prevalence from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database.
Eight hundred fifty-four million acute-care hospitalizations and 8.9 million patients with cancer.
Patients with a history of cancer hospitalized with a diagnosis of sepsis.
From 1979 to 2001, there were a total of 1,781,445 cases of sepsis in patients with cancer, yielding a mean annual incidence rate of 1,465 cases per 100,000 cancer patients and a relative risk [RR] of 9.77 compared to noncancer patients (95% confidence interval [95% CI], 9.67 to 9.88). In contrast to the absolute number of cases, the incidence rate of sepsis decreased over time, from a peak of 1,959 cases per 100,000 cancer patients in 1987 to 995 cases per 100,000 in 2001. The distribution of infectious sources causing sepsis was associated with the type of malignancy. White cancer patients had a lower risk for sepsis compared to nonwhites (African-American RR, 1.28; 95% CI, 1.16 to 1.40) and other races (RR, 1.47; 95% CI, 1.22 to 1.72); and male cancer patients had a higher risk for sepsis compared to female cancer patients (male RR, 1.17; 95% CI, 1.10 to 1.23). Cancer was an independent predictor of death among sepsis patients by multivariable analysis (adjusted odds ratio for death, 1.98; 95% CI, 1.97 to 1.99).
Patients with a history of cancer are at increased risk for acquiring and subsequently dying from sepsis, compared to the general population, although incidence and fatality rates are decreasing over time. There are significant racial and gender disparities in the incidence and outcome of sepsis among cancer patients that require explanation.
评估有癌症病史患者脓毒症的纵向流行病学情况,并特别研究脓毒症在风险或结局方面的相关差异。
利用美国非联邦急性护理住院患者的全国代表性样本(国家医院出院调查)中的脓毒症病例,时间跨度为1979年至2001年,并结合监测、流行病学和最终结果数据库中的癌症患病率。
8.54亿例急性护理住院病例和890万例癌症患者。
因脓毒症诊断而住院的有癌症病史的患者。
1979年至2001年,癌症患者中共有1,781,445例脓毒症病例,每10万名癌症患者的年平均发病率为1,465例,与非癌症患者相比相对风险[RR]为9.77(95%置信区间[95%CI],9.67至9.88)。与病例绝对数不同,脓毒症发病率随时间下降,从1987年每10万名癌症患者中的峰值1,959例降至2001年的每10万名995例。导致脓毒症的感染源分布与恶性肿瘤类型有关。白人癌症患者脓毒症风险低于非白人(非裔美国人RR,1.28;95%CI,1.16至1.40)和其他种族(RR,1.47;95%CI,1.22至1.72);男性癌症患者脓毒症风险高于女性癌症患者(男性RR,1.17;95%CI,1.10至1.23)。通过多变量分析,癌症是脓毒症患者死亡的独立预测因素(死亡调整比值比,1.98;95%CI,1.97至1.99)。
与普通人群相比,有癌症病史的患者发生脓毒症并随后死于脓毒症的风险增加,尽管发病率和死亡率随时间下降。癌症患者中脓毒症的发病率和结局存在显著的种族和性别差异,需要对此进行解释。