Thomas Benjamin S, Jafarzadeh S Reza, Warren David K, McCormick Sandra, Fraser Victoria J, Marschall Jonas
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 South Euclid Avenue, Campus Box 8051, St. Louis, MO, 63110, USA.
Department of Medicine, John A. Burns School of Medicine, 651 Ilalo Street, Honolulu, 96813, HI, USA.
BMC Anesthesiol. 2015 Nov 24;15:169. doi: 10.1186/s12871-015-0148-z.
Recent reports using administrative claims data suggest the incidence of community- and hospital-onset sepsis is increasing. Whether this reflects changing epidemiology, more effective diagnostic methods, or changes in physician documentation and medical coding practices is unclear.
We performed a temporal-trend study from 2008 to 2012 using administrative claims data and patient-level clinical data of adult patients admitted to Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis, Missouri. Temporal-trend and annual percent change were estimated using regression models with autoregressive integrated moving average errors.
We analyzed 62,261 inpatient admissions during the 5-year study period. 'Any SIRS' (i.e., SIRS on a single calendar day during the hospitalization) and 'multi-day SIRS' (i.e., SIRS on 3 or more calendar days), which both use patient-level data, and medical coding for sepsis (i.e., ICD-9-CM discharge diagnosis codes 995.91, 995.92, or 785.52) were present in 35.3 %, 17.3 %, and 3.3 % of admissions, respectively. The incidence of admissions coded for sepsis increased 9.7 % (95 % CI: 6.1, 13.4) per year, while the patient data-defined events of 'any SIRS' decreased by 1.8 % (95 % CI: -3.2, -0.5) and 'multi-day SIRS' did not change significantly over the study period. Clinically-defined sepsis (defined as SIRS plus bacteremia) and severe sepsis (defined as SIRS plus hypotension and bacteremia) decreased at statistically significant rates of 5.7 % (95 % CI: -9.0, -2.4) and 8.6 % (95 % CI: -4.4, -12.6) annually. All-cause mortality, SIRS mortality, and SIRS and clinically-defined sepsis case fatality did not change significantly during the study period. Sepsis mortality, based on ICD-9-CM codes, however, increased by 8.8 % (95 % CI: 1.9, 16.2) annually.
The incidence of sepsis, defined by ICD-9-CM codes, and sepsis mortality increased steadily without a concomitant increase in SIRS or clinically-defined sepsis. Our results highlight the need to develop strategies to integrate clinical patient-level data with administrative data to draw more accurate conclusions about the epidemiology of sepsis.
近期利用行政索赔数据的报告显示,社区获得性和医院获得性脓毒症的发病率正在上升。目前尚不清楚这是反映了流行病学的变化、更有效的诊断方法,还是医生记录和医学编码实践的改变。
我们使用行政索赔数据以及密苏里州圣路易斯市巴恩斯-犹太医院成年住院患者的患者层面临床数据,进行了一项从2008年至2012年的时间趋势研究。使用带有自回归积分滑动平均误差的回归模型来估计时间趋势和年度百分比变化。
在为期5年的研究期间,我们分析了62261例住院患者。使用患者层面数据的“任何全身炎症反应综合征(SIRS)”(即住院期间单个日历日出现的SIRS)和“多日SIRS”(即3个或更多日历日出现的SIRS),以及脓毒症的医学编码(即国际疾病分类第九版临床修订本(ICD-9-CM)出院诊断编码995.91、995.92或785.52)分别出现在35.3%、17.3%和3.3%的住院病例中。脓毒症编码住院病例的发病率每年增加9.7%(95%置信区间:6.1,13.4),而患者数据定义的“任何SIRS”事件减少了1.8%(95%置信区间:-3.2,-0.5),“多日SIRS”在研究期间没有显著变化。临床定义的脓毒症(定义为SIRS加菌血症)和严重脓毒症(定义为SIRS加低血压和菌血症)每年以5.7%(95%置信区间:-9.0,-2.4)和8.6%(95%置信区间:-4.4,-12.6)的统计学显著速率下降。在研究期间,全因死亡率、SIRS死亡率以及SIRS和临床定义的脓毒症病死率均无显著变化。然而,基于ICD-9-CM编码的脓毒症死亡率每年增加8.8%(95%置信区间:1.9,16.2)。
由ICD-9-CM编码定义的脓毒症发病率和脓毒症死亡率稳步上升,而SIRS或临床定义的脓毒症并未随之增加。我们的结果凸显了制定策略将临床患者层面数据与行政数据相结合的必要性,以便就脓毒症的流行病学得出更准确的结论。