Application of sepsis definitions to pediatric patients admitted with suspected infections in Uganda
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Date
2017-05Author
Wiens, Matthew O.
Larson, Charles P.
Kumbakumba, Elias
Kissoon, Niranjan
Ansermino, J. Mark
Singer, Joel
Wong, Hubert
Ndamira, Andrew
Kabakyenga, Jerome
Moschovis, Peter
Kiwanuka, Julius
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Objectives: Acute infectious diseases are the most common cause of under-5 mortality. However, the hospital burden of non-neonatal pediatric sepsis has not previously been described in the resource poor setting. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of sepsis among children 6 months to 5 years of age admitted with proven or suspected infection and to evaluate the presence of sepsis as a predictive tool for mortality during admission.
Design: In this Prospective cohort study we used the pediatric International Consensus Conference definition of sepsis to determine the prevalence of sepsis among children admitted to the pediatric ward with a proven or suspected infection. The diagnosis of sepsis, as well as each individual component of the sepsis definition, were evaluated for capturing in-hospital mortality.
Setting: The pediatric ward of two hospitals in Mbarara, Uganda
Patients: Admitted children between 6 months and 5 years with a confirmed or suspected infection.
Interventions: None
Measurements and Main Results: One thousand three hundred and seven (1307) subjects with a confirmed or suspected infection were enrolled and 65 children died (5.0%) during their
Admission. One thousand one hundred and twenty-one (85.9%) met the systemic inflammatory response syndrome criteria, and therefore were defined as having sepsis. The sepsis criteria captured 61 deaths, demonstrating a sensitivity and specificity of 95% (95% CI 90% – 100%) and 15% (95% CI 13% – 17%), respectively. The most discriminatory individual component of the SIRS criteria was the leukocyte count which alone had a sensitivity of 72% and a specificity of 56% for the identification of mortality in hospital.
Conclusions: This study is among the first to quantify the burden of non-neonatal pediatric sepsis in children with suspected infection, using the international consensus sepsis definition, in a typical resource constrained setting in Africa. This definition was found to be highly sensitive in identifying those who died, but had very low specificity as most children who were admitted with infections had sepsis. The SIRS-based sepsis definition offers little value in identification of children at high risk of in-hospital mortality in this setting.
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