Department of Clinical Sciences, Section for Infection Medicine, Lund University, Skåne University Hospital, Lund, Sweden.
Division of Infectious Diseases and Center for Infectious Medicine, Karolinska Institutet at Karolinska University Hospital Huddinge, Stockholm, Sweden.
PLoS One. 2020 Dec 29;15(12):e0243990. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0243990. eCollection 2020.
Increased body temperature in the Emergency Department (BT-ED) and the ICU (BT-ICU) is associated with lower mortality in patients with sepsis. Here, we compared how well BT-ED and BT-ICU predict mortality; investigated mortality in various combinations of BT-ED and BT-ICU, and; compared degree of fever in the ED and ICU and associated quality of care.
2385 adults who were admitted to an ICU within 24 hours of ED arrival with severe sepsis or septic shock were included.
Thirty-day mortality was 23.6%. Median BT-ED and BT-ICU was 38.1 and 37.6°C. Crude mortality decreased more than 5% points per°C increase for both BT-ED and BT-ICU. Adjusted OR for mortality was 0.82/°C increase for BT-ED (0.76-0.88, p < 0.001), and 0.89 for BT-ICU (0.83-0.95, p<0.001). Patients who were at/below median temperature in both the ED and in the ICU had the highest mortality, 32%, and those with over median in the ED and at/below in the ICU had the lowest, 16%, (p<0.001). Women had 0.2°C lower median BT-ED (p = 0.03) and 0.3°C lower BT-ICU (p<0.0001) than men. Older patients had lower BT in the ICU, but not in the ED. Fever was associated with a higher rate of sepsis bundle achievement in the ED, but lower nurse workload in the ICU.
BT-ED was more useful to prognosticate mortality than BT-ICU. Despite better prognosis in patients with elevated BT, fever was associated with higher quality of care in the ED. Future studies should assess how BT-ED can be used to improve triage of infected patients, assigning higher priority to patients with low-grade/no fever and vice versa. Patients with at/below median BT in both ED and ICU have the highest mortality and should receive special attention. Different BT according to sex and age also needs further study.
急诊(BT-ED)和重症监护病房(BT-ICU)体温升高与脓毒症患者死亡率降低相关。在这里,我们比较了 BT-ED 和 BT-ICU 预测死亡率的能力;研究了 BT-ED 和 BT-ICU 不同组合的死亡率;并比较了急诊和重症监护病房的发热程度以及相关的护理质量。
共纳入 2385 例在急诊科就诊后 24 小时内入住 ICU 的严重脓毒症或感染性休克患者。
30 天死亡率为 23.6%。BT-ED 和 BT-ICU 的中位数分别为 38.1°C 和 37.6°C。BT-ED 和 BT-ICU 每升高 1°C,死亡率就会降低超过 5%。BT-ED 死亡率的调整比值比为 0.82/°C 增加(0.76-0.88,p < 0.001),BT-ICU 为 0.89(0.83-0.95,p<0.001)。BT-ED 和 BT-ICU 均处于中位数以下的患者死亡率最高,为 32%,而 BT-ED 高于中位数且 BT-ICU 处于中位数以下的患者死亡率最低,为 16%(p<0.001)。女性 BT-ED 中位数比男性低 0.2°C(p = 0.03),BT-ICU 中位数低 0.3°C(p<0.0001)。老年患者 ICU 中的 BT 较低,但急诊科中则不然。发热与急诊科中实现脓毒症包的比例较高相关,但 ICU 中护士工作量较低相关。
BT-ED 比 BT-ICU 更能预测死亡率。尽管 BT 升高的患者预后更好,但发热与急诊科的护理质量更高相关。未来的研究应评估如何使用 BT-ED 来改善感染患者的分诊,对低级别/无发热的患者给予更高的优先级,反之亦然。BT-ED 和 BT-ICU 均处于中位数以下的患者死亡率最高,应特别关注。根据性别和年龄的不同 BT 也需要进一步研究。