Wang Jeffrey, Strich Jeffrey R, Applefeld Willard N, Sun Junfeng, Cui Xizhong, Natanson Charles, Eichacker Peter Q
Critical Care Medicine Department, Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.
J Thorac Dis. 2020 Feb;12(Suppl 1):S22-S36. doi: 10.21037/jtd.2019.12.100.
In 2015, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) instituted an all-or-none sepsis performance measure bundle (SEP-1) to promote high-quality, cost-effective care. Systematic reviews demonstrated only low-quality evidence supporting most of SEP-1's interventions. CMS has removed some but not all of these unproven components. The current SEP-1 version requires patients with suspected sepsis have a lactate level, blood cultures, broad-spectrum antibiotics and, if hypotensive, a fixed 30 mL/kg fluid infusion within 3 hours, and a repeat lactate if initially elevated within 6 hours. Experts have continued to raise concerns that SEP-1 remains overly prescriptive, lacks a sound scientific basis and presents risks (overuse of antibiotics and inappropriate fluids not titrated to need). To incentivize compliance with SEP-1, CMS now publicly publishes how often hospitals complete all interventions in individual patients. However, compliance measured across hospitals (5 studies, 48-2,851 hospitals) or patients (three studies, 110-851 patients) has been low (approximately 50%) which is not surprising given SEP-1's lack of scientific basis. The largest observational study (1,738 patients) reporting survival rates employing SEP-1 found they were not significantly improved with the measure (P=0.53) as did the next largest study (851 patients, adjusted survival odds ratio 1.36, 95% CI, 0.85 to 2.18). Two smaller observational studies (158 and 450 patients) reported SEP-1 improved unadjusted survival (P≤0.05) but were confounded either by baseline imbalances or by simultaneous introduction of a code sepsis protocol to improve compliance. Regardless, retrospective studies have well known biases related to non-randomized designs, uncontrolled data collection and failure to adjust for unrecognized influential variables. Such low-quality science should not be the basis for a national mandate compelling care for a rapidly lethal disease with a high mortality rate. Instead, SEP-1 should be based on high quality reproducible evidence from randomized controlled trials (RCT) demonstrating its benefit and thereby safety. Otherwise we risk not only doing harm but standardizing it.
2015年,美国医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心(CMS)制定了一项非此即彼的脓毒症绩效衡量指标集(SEP-1),以促进高质量、具有成本效益的医疗服务。系统评价表明,仅有低质量证据支持SEP-1的大多数干预措施。CMS已删除了其中一些未经证实的部分,但并非全部。当前的SEP-1版本要求疑似脓毒症患者检测乳酸水平、进行血培养、使用广谱抗生素,若出现低血压,需在3小时内静脉输注30 mL/kg的固定液体量,若初始乳酸水平升高,则需在6小时内复查乳酸水平。专家们继续担心SEP-1仍然过于指令性,缺乏可靠的科学依据,并存在风险(过度使用抗生素以及未根据需求调整的不适当液体输注)。为激励医院遵守SEP-1,CMS现在公开公布医院对个体患者完成所有干预措施的频率。然而,在医院层面(5项研究,48 - 2851家医院)或患者层面(3项研究,110 - 851名患者)测量的依从性一直很低(约50%),考虑到SEP-1缺乏科学依据,这并不奇怪。报告采用SEP-1的生存率的最大观察性研究(1738名患者)发现,该指标并未显著提高生存率(P = 0.53),第二大研究(851名患者,调整后的生存优势比为1.36,95%置信区间为0.85至2.18)也是如此。两项较小的观察性研究(158名和450名患者)报告SEP-1改善了未调整的生存率(P≤0.05),但受到基线不平衡或同时引入脓毒症编码方案以提高依从性的影响而产生混淆。无论如何,回顾性研究存在与非随机设计、无对照数据收集以及未能调整未识别的影响变量相关的众所周知的偏差。如此低质量的科学不应成为一项全国性指令的基础,该指令强制要求对一种死亡率高的快速致死性疾病进行治疗。相反,SEP-1应基于来自随机对照试验(RCT)的高质量可重复证据,以证明其益处及安全性。否则,我们不仅有造成伤害的风险,还可能使其标准化。