Diagnosis of infection
Recommendation
|
---|
11. For adults with suspected sepsis or septic shock but unconfirmed infection, we recommend continuously re-evaluating and searching for alternative diagnoses and discontinuing empiric antimicrobials if an alternative cause of illness is demonstrated or strongly suspected
|
Best Practice statement
|
Rationale
In previous versions of these guidelines, we highlighted the importance of obtaining a full screen for infectious agents prior to starting antimicrobials wherever it is possible to do so in a timely fashion [12, 13]. As a best practice statement, we recommended that appropriate routine microbiologic cultures (including blood) should be obtained before starting antimicrobial therapy in patients with suspected sepsis and septic shock if it results in no substantial delay in the start of antimicrobials (i.e. < 45 min). This recommendation has not been updated in this version but remains as valid as before.
The signs and symptoms of sepsis are nonspecific and often mimic multiple other diseases [90,91,92]. Since there is no “gold standard” test to diagnose sepsis, the bedside provider cannot have a differential diagnosis of sepsis alone in a patient with organ dysfunction. Indeed, a third or more of patients initially diagnosed with sepsis turn out to have non-infectious conditions [90, 93, 94]. Best practice is to continually assess the patient to determine if other diagnoses are more or less likely, especially since a patient’s clinical trajectory can evolve significantly after hospital admission, increasing or decreasing the likelihood of a diagnosis of sepsis. With this uncertainty, there can be significant challenges in determining when it is “appropriate” to de-escalate or discontinue antibiotics.
Another major challenge is implementing a system that reminds clinicians to focus on the fact that the patient is still receiving antibiotics each day, especially as providers rotate in and out of the care team. Systems that promote such reassessment by automatic stop orders, electronic prompts, or mandatory check lists all seem useful in theory, but each has disadvantages in terms of provider acceptance or assuring that providers thoughtfully assess the need for antibiotics rather than checking a box in the electronic record or reflexively acknowledging a prompt, without considering its underlying rationale [95].
We did not identify any direct or indirect evidence assessing this important issue. Thus, clinicians are strongly encouraged to discontinue antimicrobials if a non-infectious syndrome (or an infectious syndrome that does not benefit from antimicrobials) is demonstrated or strongly suspected. Since this situation is not always apparent, continued reassessment of the patient should optimise the chances of infected patients receiving antimicrobial therapy and non-infected patients avoiding therapy that is not indicated.
Time to antibiotics
Recommendations
|
---|
12. For adults with possible septic shock or a high likelihood for sepsis, we recommend administering antimicrobials immediately, ideally within 1 h of recognition
Strong recommendation, low quality of evidence (Septic shock)
Strong recommendation, very low quality of evidence (Sepsis without shock)
|
13. For adults with possible sepsis without shock, we recommend rapid assessment of the likelihood of infectious versus non-infectious causes of acute illness
Best Practice Statement
Remarks
Rapid assessment includes history and clinical examination, tests for both infectious and non-infectious causes of acute illness and immediate treatment for acute conditions that can mimic sepsis. Whenever possible this should be completed within 3 h of presentation so that a decision can be made as to the likelihood of an infectious cause of the patient’s presentation and timely antimicrobial therapy provided if the likelihood of sepsis is thought to be high
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14. For adults with possible sepsis without shock, we suggest a time-limited course of rapid investigation and if concern for infection persists, the administration of antimicrobials within 3 h from the time when sepsis was first recognised
Weak recommendation, very low quality of evidence
|
15. For adults with a low likelihood of infection and without shock, we suggest deferring antimicrobials while continuing to closely monitor the patient.
Weak recommendation, very low quality of evidence
|
Rationale
Early administration of appropriate antimicrobials is one of the most effective interventions to reduce mortality in patients with sepsis [96,97,98]. Delivering antimicrobials to patients with sepsis or septic shock should therefore be treated as an emergency. The imperative to provide antimicrobials as early as possible, however, must be balanced against the potential harms associated with administering unnecessary antimicrobials to patients without infection [99, 100]. These include a range of adverse events such as allergic or hypersensitivity reactions, kidney injury, thrombocytopenia, Clostridioides difficile infection, and antimicrobial resistance [101,102,103,104,105,106]. Accurately diagnosing sepsis is challenging as sepsis can present in subtle ways, and some presentations that first appear to be sepsis turn out to be non-infectious conditions [90, 93, 107, 108]. Evaluating the likelihood of infection and severity-of-illness for each patient with suspected sepsis should inform the necessity and urgency of antimicrobials [99, 100].
The mortality reduction associated with early antimicrobials appears strongest in patients with septic shock, where a number of studies have reported a strong association between time-to-antibiotics and death in patients with septic shock but weaker associations in patients without septic shock [98, 109, 110]. In a study of 49,331 patients treated at 149 New York hospitals, each additional hour of time from ED arrival to administration of antimicrobials was associated with 1.04 increased odds of in-hospital mortality, p < 0.001 (1.07 (95% CI 1.05–1.09) for patients receiving vasopressors vs. 1.01 (95% CI 0.99–1.04) for patients not on vasopressors) [98]. In a study of 35,000 patients treated at Kaiser Permanente Northern California, each additional hour of time from ER arrival to administration of antimicrobials was associated with 1.09 increased odds of in-hospital mortality (1.07 for patients with “severe” sepsis (lactate ≥ 2, at least one episode of hypotension, required non-invasive or invasive mechanical ventilation or has organ dysfunction) and 1.14 for patients with septic shock); which equated to a 0.4% absolute mortality increase for “severe” sepsis and a 1.8% absolute increase for septic shock [110]. Finally, in a study of 10,811 patients treated in four Utah hospitals, each hour delay in time from ED arrival to administration of antimicrobials was associated with 1.16 increased odds of in-hospital and 1.10 increased odds of 1-year mortality (1.13 in patients with hypotension vs 1.09 in patients without hypotension) [111]. Other studies, however, did not observe an association between antimicrobial timing and mortality [112,113,114,115,116,117].
It should be noted that all the aforementioned studies were observational analyses and hence at risk of bias due to insufficient sample size, inadequate risk-adjustment, blending together the effects of large delays until antibiotics with short delays, or other study design issues [118].
In patients with sepsis without shock, the association between time to antimicrobials and mortality within the first few hours from presentation is less consistent [98, 110]. Two RCTs have been published [119, 120]. One failed to achieve a difference in time-to-antimicrobials between arms [120]. The other found no significant difference in mortality despite a 90-min difference in median time interval to antimicrobial administration [119]. Observational studies do, however, suggest that mortality may increase after intervals exceeding 3–5 h from hospital arrival and/or sepsis recognition [98, 111, 119, 120]. We therefore suggest initiating antibiotics in patients with possible sepsis without shock as soon as sepsis appears to be the most likely diagnosis, and no later than 3 h after sepsis was first suspected if concern for sepsis persists at that time.
Overall, given the high risk of death with septic shock and the strong association of antimicrobial timing and mortality, the panel issued a strong recommendation to administer antimicrobials immediately, and within 1 h, in all patients with potential septic shock. In addition, for patients with confirmed/very likely sepsis, we recommend antimicrobials be administered immediately (Fig. 1). For patients with possible sepsis without shock, we recommend a rapid assessment of infectious and non-infectious etiologies of illness be undertaken to determine, within 3 h, whether antibiotics should be administered or whether antibiotics should be deferred while continuing to monitor the patient closely.
Limited data from resource-limited settings suggest that timely administration of antimicrobials in patients with sepsis and septic shock is beneficial and potentially feasible [121,122,123,124,125,126]. Access and availability of a wide range of antimicrobials in such settings may however vary [54, 55, 57, 59, 61]. The availability and turn-around time for laboratory testing, rapid infectious diagnostic, imaging, etc. varies widely by regions and settings. As such, the rapid assessment of infectious and non-infectious etiologies of illness will differ across settings, depending on what is feasible to achieve. Recent recommendations pertaining to the use of antimicrobials in patients with sepsis and septic shock in resource-limited settings are in line with the current recommendations [123].
Biomarkers to start antibiotics
Recommendation
|
---|
16. For adults with suspected sepsis or septic shock, we suggest against using procalcitonin plus clinical evaluation to decide when to start antimicrobials, as compared to clinical evaluation alone
|
Weak recommendation, very low quality of evidence
|
Rationale
Procalcitonin is undetectable in healthy states, but rises rapidly in response to pro-inflammatory stimuli, especially bacterial infections [127]. In theory, procalcitonin levels in combination with clinical evaluation may facilitate the diagnosis of serious bacterial infections and prompt early initiation of antimicrobials. In a meta-analysis of 30 studies (3244 patients), procalcitonin had a pooled sensitivity of 77% and specificity of 79% for sepsis in critically ill patients [128].
We identified direct evidence from three RCTs that compared procalcitonin-guided protocols for antibiotic initiation vs usual care [129,130,131]. A meta-analysis of the three trials (n = 1769 ICU patients) found no difference in short-term mortality (RR 0.99; 95% CI 0.86–1.15), length of ICU stays (MD 0.19 days; 95% CI −0.98 to 1.36) or length of hospitalisation (MD 7.00 days; 95% CI −26.24 to 12.24). Long-term mortality, readmission rates and hospital-free days were not reported in any of the trials, and no relevant studies on the costs associated with use of procalcitonin were found. In general, knowledge about the undesirable effects was lacking, and the quality of evidence was very low. Published guidelines for the management of community-acquired pneumonia recommend initiation of antimicrobials for patients with community-acquired pneumonia regardless of procalcitonin level [132].
With no apparent benefit, unknown costs, and limited availability in some settings including low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), the panel issued a weak recommendation against using procalcitonin to guide antimicrobial initiation in addition to clinical evaluation.
Antimicrobial choice
Recommendations
|
---|
17. For adults with sepsis or septic shock at high risk of methicillin resistant staph aureus (MRSA), we recommend using empiric antimicrobials with MRSA coverage over using antimicrobials without MRSA coverage
Best Practice statement
|
18. For adults with sepsis or septic shock at low risk of methicillin resistant staph aureus (MRSA), we suggest against using empiric antimicrobials with MRSA coverage, as compared with using antimicrobials without MRSA coverage
Weak recommendation, low quality of evidence
|
Rationale
The decision on whether to include an antibiotic active against MRSA in an empiric treatment regimen for sepsis and septic shock depends upon (a) the likelihood that the patient’s infection is caused by MRSA, (b) the risk of harm associated with withholding treatment for MRSA in a patient with MRSA, and (c) the risk of harm associated with MRSA treatment in a patient without MRSA.
MRSA accounts for approximately 5% of culture-positive infections among critically ill patients [133], and may be decreasing according to some reports [134, 135]. The incidence of MRSA varies, however, by region (ranging from ~ 2% in Western Europe to 10% in North America) and by patient-related characteristics [133, 136, 137]. Patient-related risk factors for MRSA include prior history of MRSA infection or colonisation, recent IV antibiotics, history of recurrent skin infections or chronic wounds, presence of invasive devices, haemodialysis, recent hospital admissions and severity of illness [136, 138,139,140,141,142].
Observational data on the impact of including MRSA coverage in empiric regimens vary. Some studies focus on patients with documented MRSA infections, while others evaluate the impact of MRSA coverage in undifferentiated patients. Among patients with documented MRSA infections, delays of > 24–48 h until antibiotic administration are associated with increased mortality in some studies [143,144,145,146,147], but not in others [148,149,150,151,152,153,154]. Among undifferentiated patients with pneumonia or sepsis, broad-spectrum regimens including agents active against MRSA were associated with higher mortality, particularly among patients without MRSA [137, 151, 155, 156]. The undesirable effects associated with unnecessary MRSA coverage are also supported by studies showing an association between early discontinuation of MRSA coverage and better outcomes in patients with negative nares or bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) MRSA PCR [157,158,159].
Failure to cover for MRSA in a patient with MRSA may be harmful, but unnecessary MRSA coverage in a patient without MRSA may also be harmful. Data from RCTs, including the evaluation of nasal swab testing to withhold therapy for MRSA, are warranted, and studies on rapid diagnostic tools and clinical prediction rules for MRSA are needed.
Recommendations
|
---|
19. For adults with sepsis or septic shock and high risk for multidrug resistant (MDR) organisms, we suggest using two antimicrobials with gram-negative coverage for empiric treatment over one gram-negative agent
Weak recommendation, very low quality of evidence
|
20. For adults with sepsis or septic shock and low risk for MDR organisms, we suggest against using two Gram-negative agents for empiric treatment, as compared to one Gram-negative agent
Weak recommendation, very low quality of evidence
|
21. For adults with sepsis or septic shock, we suggest against using double gram-negative coverage once the causative pathogen and the susceptibilities are known
Weak recommendation, very low quality of evidence
|
Rationale
Considering the increasing frequency of MDR bacteria in many parts of the world and associations between delays in active therapy and worse outcomes, the initial use of multidrug therapy is often required to ensure the empiric regimen includes at least one effective agent that is active against the offending organism [12, 13]. In the empiric phase—before causative agent(s) and susceptibilities are known, the optimal choice of antibiotic therapy depends on the local prevalence of resistant organisms, patient risk factors for resistant organisms, and the severity of illness. In the directed/targeted phase, once causative agent(s) and susceptibilities are known, sustained double gram-negative coverage is rarely necessary except for patients with highly resistant organisms.
This was borne out in a recent systematic review with meta-analysis of 10 RCTs, no differences in mortality or other patient-important outcomes between empiric mono- vs. combination antibiotic therapy in adult ICU patients with severe sepsis or septic shock were observed, also when taking disease severity into consideration [160]. Results from the largest RCT included in the meta-analysis (a comparison of sustained courses of moxifloxacin and meropenem vs meropenem alone in a low endemic resistance setting) were consistent with the findings from the meta-analysis [161].
Recommendations about the use of more than one gram-negative agent for empiric treatment over one gram-negative agent are challenging given clinical heterogeneity, including patient characteristics, source of infection, causative agents, and antibiotic resistance patterns. Local information about the resistance patterns of the most common causative agents of sepsis is essential to choose the most appropriate empiric antibiotic therapy. For this reason, we refrained from proposing recommendations regarding double gram-negative coverage in patients with sepsis or septic shock overall, but instead recommend tailoring the use of double coverage based on patients’ risk of MDR pathogens. Factors to guide this decision include: proven infection or colonisation with antibiotic-resistant organisms within the preceding year, local prevalence of antibiotic-resistant organisms, hospital-acquired/healthcare associated (versus community-acquired infection), broad-spectrum antibiotic use within the preceding 90 days, concurrent use selective digestive decontamination (SDD), travel to a highly endemic country within the preceding 90 days (see https://resistancemap.cddep.org/) and hospitalisation abroad within the preceding 90 days [162,163,164]. In the directed/targeted phase, once causative agent(s) and susceptibilities are known, sustained double gram-negative coverage is not necessary except possibly for patients with highly resistant organisms with no proven safe and efficacious therapeutic option.
The overall quality of evidence was very low, and the direct costs of antibiotics can increase with the routine use of multiple agents for treatment. This may specifically have an impact in resource-limited settings.
In general, in patients at high risk for MDR organisms, we suggest using two gram negative agents for empiric treatment to increase the likelihood of adequate coverage, while in patients with a low risk for MDR organisms, we suggest using a single agents for empiric treatment, as there are no apparent benefits of using two agents and the a risk of antimicrobial-associated undesirable effects, including direct toxicity, Clostridioides difficile infection and development of antibiotic resistance [165]. Empiric double coverage of gram-negative bacilli is most important in patients at high risk for resistant organisms with severe illness, particularly septic shock.
Antifungal therapy
Recommendations
|
---|
22. For adults with sepsis or septic shock at high risk of fungal infection, we suggest using empiric antifungal therapy over no antifungal therapy
Weak recommendation, low quality of evidence
|
23. For adults with sepsis or septic shock at low risk of fungal infection, we suggest against empiric use of antifungal therapy
Weak recommendation, low quality of evidence
|
Rationale
Sepsis and septic shock due to fungi are most commonly observed in ICUs and are associated with poor outcomes [166,167,168,169,170]. Some observational studies suggested that prompt initiation of appropriate empiric antifungal therapy may be associated with a reduction in mortality, however these studies do not prove a causal relationship between antifungal therapy and outcome, nor do they clarify the role of timing of treatment, and some other studies have failed to show this association [167, 171,172,173].
In an updated meta-analysis of empiric antifungal therapy versus no antifungal therapy in adult critically ill patients, no difference in short-term mortality was observed. In the largest and most recent RCT—EMPIRICUS—there was also no difference in outcome between patients receiving empiric antifungal therapy (micafungin) and patients receiving placebo [174]. The overall quality of evidence was low, and treatment with empiric antifungals may be associated with increased costs.
While patients with sepsis or septic shock may not in general benefit from empiric antifungals, some patients with particular risk factors for fungal infection may, for example patients with febrile neutropenia who fail to defervesce after 4–7 days of broad-spectrum antibacterial therapy are at increased risk of having fungal disease (Table 2) [175, 176]. The risk of Candida sepsis or septic shock for other immunosuppressed populations is highly disease- and therapy-specific. Importantly, the decision to start empiric antifungal therapy depends on the type and number of risk factors, along with the local epidemiology of fungal infections.
Table 1 Table of current recommendations and changes from the previous 2016 recommendations Accordingly, we suggest using empiric antifungal therapy in patients at high risk of fungal infection, while we suggest avoiding this if the risk is low. The choice of antifungal agent for empiric therapy depends on multiple issues including host factors, prior colonisation and infection, prior exposure to prophylactic or therapeutic antifungal therapy, comorbidities, and the toxicities and drug interactions of the therapeutic options.
Antiviral therapy
Recommendation
|
---|
24. We make no recommendation on the use of antiviral agents
|
Rationale
Viral infections encompass a broad spectrum of pathogens and diseases in humans but—apart from specific clinical situations such as epidemics/pandemics—are rarely the primary cause of sepsis. In a recent large international point prevalence study, viruses were documented in less than 4% of infections [133].
Historically, influenza has been one of the more common viral causes of sepsis. However, it is unclear to what extent the primary viral infection as opposed to bacterial pneumonia co-infection is the cause of organ dysfunction in these patients [219,220,221,222]. More recently, SARS-CoV-2 (causing COVID-19) is now responsible for many cases of infection and sepsis [223]. The ongoing pandemic due to SARS-CoV-2 has resulted in the understanding of this condition changing very rapidly [224].
While there appears to be no overall effect of neuraminidase inhibitors on mortality in patients with influenza-related pneumonia, there may be an effect when administered early in the course of the disease [225]. For detailed information on specific antiviral therapy, including for influenza and SARS CoV-2, please refer to dedicated clinical practice guidelines [226,227,228].
Immunocompromised patients are particularly vulnerable to viral infections, including patients with neutropenia, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, haematological malignancies and haematopoietic stem cell transplantation or solid organ transplants; in these patients herpes simplex virus, Epstein-Barr virus, cytomegalovirus, and respiratory viruses such as adenoviruses, can cause severe disease [229]. Tropical and subtropical regions have endemic and epidemic outbreaks of zoonotic viral infections including those caused by Dengue, Ebola, Lassa, Marburg, Sin Nombre and Chikungunya virus. Many of these can manifest with clinical signs of sepsis, particularly in their early stages. Unfortunately, effective therapies are lacking for most of these viruses.
The desirable effects of empiric antiviral therapy are unknown, and as for other antimicrobial agents there is a risk of undesirable effects [165]. Data on cost effectiveness were not available.
Due to the rapidly changing position related to antiviral therapies in critically ill patients presenting with several acute respiratory failure, this panel decided not to issue a recommendation on antiviral therapies and to refer the reader to more specific guidelines [226].
Delivery of antibiotics
Recommendation
|
---|
25. For adults with sepsis or septic shock, we suggest using prolonged infusion of beta-lactams for maintenance (after an initial bolus) over conventional bolus infusion
|
Weak recommendation, moderate quality of evidence
|
Rationale
Beta-lactam antibiotics may be subject to changes in important pharmacokinetic parameters in the setting of sepsis and septic shock resulting in sub-therapeutic concentrations [230, 231]. As opposed to conventional intermittent infusion (infusion ≤ 30 min), administration by prolonged IV infusion, either as an extended infusion (antibiotic infused over at least half of the dosing interval) or as a continuous infusion, results in sustained beta-lactam concentrations which align with the pharmacodynamics of these drugs.
Two meta-analyses reported similar results supporting reduced short-term mortality (RR 0.70; 95% CI 0.57–0.87) with prolonged infusion of beta-lactams [232, 233].
No trials assessed the undesirable effects of continuous infusion, and the desirable effects were deemed important, while the overall quality of evidence was moderate. Prolonged infusion is a feasible intervention if suitable IV access is present, and resources are available to ensure the beta-lactam is infused over the necessary duration. The latter may be an issue in some resource limited settings, including LMICs.
Administration of a loading dose of antibiotic before prolonged infusion is essential to avoid delays to achieving effective beta-lactam concentrations [234]. Over the course of therapy, both extended and continuous infusions will occupy a venous catheter/lumen more than an intermittent infusion and drug-stability and drug-drug compatibility considerations are important to ensure effectiveness of antibiotic and other IV drug therapies [235].
The reduction in short-term mortality from prolonged infusion of beta-lactams is significant with the intervention being feasible with negligible cost implications and no data suggesting inferior outcomes with prolonged infusion. Accordingly, we suggest prolonged infusion of beta-lactams over conventional bolus infusion in patients with sepsis and septic shock if the necessary equipment is available. Further research is needed on long-term outcomes, on the effect on emergence of antimicrobial resistance, and on costs of prolonged versus bolus infusion of beta-lactams [236].
Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics
Recommendation
|
---|
26. For adults with sepsis or septic shock, we recommend optimising dosing strategies of antimicrobials based on accepted pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) principles and specific drug properties
|
Best Practice Statement
|
Rationale
Antibiotics are subject to changes in PK/PD parameters in sepsis and septic shock where resultant concentrations may be too low risking clinical failure, or too high leading to toxicity (Table 3) [237,238,239]. Augmented renal clearance [240], AKI [241], hypoalbuminemia [242], RRT [243, 244], and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation [245, 246] are examples of common scenarios that affect the concentrations of some antibiotics. Administration of antibiotics using an approach that adheres to PK/PD principles and using dosing regimens developed in patients with sepsis and septic shock is more likely to result in effective and safe drug concentrations compared to use of dosing recommendations provided in the manufacturer’s product information [247].
We did not identify any relevant data quantifying the value of dosing based on PK/PD principles in adults with sepsis and septic shock. Although there are no data on this topic directly derived from adults with sepsis and septic shock, data from a broader patient population, critically ill patients, support an increased likelihood of achieving effective and safe antibiotic concentrations when applying PK/PD principles to dosing [248]. The application of PK/PD principles can be aided by clinical pharmacists [249]. Some studies in critically ill patients have reported benefits in terms of clinical cure [237, 250,251,252,253].
Applying a PK/PD approach to antibiotic dosing requires support from knowledgeable clinician team members [254], use of a patient population-specific guideline document [255], use of therapeutic drug monitoring [256], and/or use of dosing software [238, 248]. Some of these potential approaches to application of PK/PD-based dosing require extra resources, some of which may not be available in all settings, in which case freely available resources such as dosing nomograms can be used [234, 257, 258]. Guidance on how to apply a PK/PD approach for specific drug classes have been described elsewhere [237]. Further research is needed on short- and long-term mortality outcomes, effect on emergence of antimicrobial resistance, impact on drug stability within prolonged infusions and health economics of different PK/PD-based approaches to dosing (see Table 3).
Use of therapeutic drug monitoring has been described for all drugs, although it is not widely available for most.
Source control
Recommendation
|
---|
27. For adults with sepsis or septic shock, we recommend rapidly identifying or excluding a specific anatomical diagnosis of infection that requires emergent source control and implementing any required source control intervention as soon as medically and logistically practical
|
Best Practice Statement
|
Rationale
Appropriate source control is a key principle in the management of sepsis and septic shock [12, 13]. Source control may include drainage of an abscess, debriding infected necrotic tissue, removal of a potentially infected device, or definitive control of a source of ongoing microbial contamination [262]. Foci of infection readily amenable to source control include intra-abdominal abscesses, gastrointestinal perforation, ischaemic bowel or volvulus, cholangitis, cholecystitis, pyelonephritis associated with obstruction or abscess, necrotizing soft tissue infection, other deep space infection (e.g., empyema or septic arthritis), and implanted device infections [262].
Source control of infectious foci was associated with improved survival in recent observational and cluster randomised studies [120, 263, 264]. Source control should be achieved as soon as possible following initial resuscitation [265, 266]. While there are limited data to conclusively issue a recommendation regarding the timeframe in which source control should be obtained, smaller studies suggest that source control within 6–12 h is advantageous [265,266,267,268,269,270,271]. Studies generally show reduced survival beyond that point. The failure to show benefit with source control implemented in less than 6 h may be a consequence of the limited number of patients and the heterogeneity of the intervention. Therefore, any required source control intervention in sepsis and septic shock should ideally be implemented as soon as medically and logistically practical after the diagnosis is made [120]. Clinical experience suggests that without adequate source control, many severe presentations will not stabilise or improve despite rapid resuscitation and provision of appropriate antimicrobials. In view of this fact, prolonged efforts at medical stabilisation in lieu of source control for severely ill patients, particularly those with septic shock, are generally not advised [272].
The selection of optimal source control methods must weigh the benefits and risks of the specific intervention, the patient’s preference, clinician’s expertise, availability, risks of the procedure, potential delays, and the probability of the procedure’s success. In general, the least invasive option that will effectively achieve source control should be pursued. Open surgical intervention should be considered when other interventional approaches are inadequate or cannot be provided in a timely fashion. Surgical exploration may also be indicated when diagnostic uncertainty persists despite radiologic evaluation, when the probability of success with a percutaneous procedure is uncertain, or when the undesirable effects of a failed procedure are high. Logistic factors unique to each institution, such as surgical or interventional staff availability, may also play a role in the decision. Future research is needed to investigate the optimal timing and method of source control in patients with sepsis and septic shock with a source of infection amenable to drainage.
Recommendation
|
---|
28. For adults with sepsis or septic shock, we recommend prompt removal of intravascular access devices that are a possible source of sepsis or septic shock after other vascular access has been established
|
Best Practice Statement
|
Rationale
Removal of a potentially infected intravascular access device is considered a part of adequate source control [262]. An intravascular device suspected to be a source of sepsis should be removed after establishing another site for vascular access and following successful initial resuscitation [265, 266]. In the absence of septic shock or fungemia, some implanted tunnelled catheter infections may be treated effectively with prolonged antimicrobial therapy if removal of the catheter is not practical [273]. However, catheter removal with adequate antimicrobial therapy is definitive and is the preferred treatment in most cases.
We identified one relevant RCT [274] and two observational studies [275, 276]. There was no evidence of a difference in mortality, however, the studies were hampered by significant limitations, including risk of confounding by indication (the observational studies) and imprecision (the RCT), which is why the results should be interpreted cautiously. The quality of evidence was very low.
De-escalation of antibiotics
Recommendation
|
---|
29. For adults with sepsis or septic shock, we suggest daily assessment for de-escalation of antimicrobials over using fixed durations of therapy without daily reassessment for de-escalation
|
Weak recommendation, very low quality of evidence
|
Rationale
Antimicrobial exposure is linked to the development of antimicrobial resistance and efforts to reduce both the number of antibiotics administered and their spectrum of therapy are therefore important strategies in patients with sepsis and septic shock [165]. This is particularly relevant in empiric therapy where broad-spectrum therapy is recommended, as the causative pathogen has not yet been identified. Once both the pathogen(s) and susceptibilities are known, antimicrobial de-escalation—i.e. stopping an antimicrobial that is no longer necessary (in case of combination therapy) or changing an antimicrobial to narrow the spectrum is encouraged. Given the adverse societal and individual risks to continued unnecessary antimicrobial therapy, thoughtful de-escalation of antimicrobials based on adequate clinical improvement is appropriate even if cultures are negative. Early discontinuation of all antimicrobial therapy if infection is ruled out is advisable [277]. Antimicrobial de-escalation should ideally be done as soon as possible, and rapid diagnostic techniques may facilitate this.
We identified direct evidence from 13 studies (1968 patients) [277], including 1 RCT [278]. In our meta-analysis, we observed improved short-term mortality in patients who were de-escalated (RR 0.72; 95% CI 0.57–0.91) (Supplementary Appendix 2). Long-term mortality was evaluated in one study only and did not demonstrate a difference (RR 0.99; 95% CI 0.64–1.52). De-escalation was associated with shorter length of stay in the hospital (MD −5.56 days; 95% CI −7.68 to −3.44), but not in the ICU (MD −2.6 days; 95% CI −5.91 to 0.72).
Most studies were observational, and there are concerns that de-escalation is used primarily in patients who are getting better, which is why the reported improved short-term mortality should be interpreted with caution [277, 279].
De-escalation is in generally safe, may offer cost savings when unnecessary antibiotics are discontinued, and reduced risk of antimicrobial resistance and reduced toxicity and side-effects may be important [280]. Based on the overall very low quality of evidence, RCTs are warranted along with more studies on antimicrobial resistance.
Duration of antibiotics
Recommendation
|
---|
30. For adults with an initial diagnosis of sepsis or septic shock and adequate source control, we suggest using shorter over longer duration of antimicrobial therapy
|
Weak recommendation, very low quality of evidence
|
Rationale
Restricting antimicrobial therapy to the shortest course associated with better outcomes is an important part of antimicrobial stewardship [281,282,283,284,285]. The optimal duration of antimicrobial therapy for a given patient with sepsis or septic shock depends on many factors, including host, microbe, drug, and anatomical site (Table 2) [99, 100].
Table 2 Examples of risk factors for fungal infection Table 3 Guidance for PK/PD-based dosing for specific drug classes
Table 4 Planned duration of empirical antimicrobial therapy in RCTs of shorter versus longer duration of therapy according to clinical syndrome
There have been considerable efforts over the past two decades to clarify the optimal duration of antimicrobial therapy by comparing “short” courses with traditional (“longer”) courses. There are data from RCTs in specific conditions such as pneumonia [286,287,288,289], urinary tract infections [290], bacteremia [291, 292], and intraabdominal infections [293]. In many of the trials, the shorter course was just as effective as the longer course but associated with fewer adverse consequences. Very few trials, however, focussed exclusively on critically ill patients with sepsis or septic shock, and the overall quality of evidence was very low.
Given the lack of definitive and generalizable data regarding the optimal duration of therapy for patients who are critically ill, it is not surprising that there is considerably practice variation [281, 294]. Specialist consultation appears to be associated with improved patient outcomes for a variety of infectious syndromes [295,296,297,298,299,300]. This has generally been ascribed to improvements in microbial appropriateness of the empiric antimicrobial regimen provided. However, it is also possible that reducing the duration of unnecessary therapy may account for at least part of the benefit.
Thus, for adults with an initial diagnosis of sepsis or septic shock and adequate source control, we suggest a shorter course of antibiotics, as this is less costly, has fewer undesirable effects without impacting adversely on outcomes (see Table 4).
Biomarkers to discontinue antibiotics
Recommendation
|
---|
31. For adults with an initial diagnosis of sepsis or septic shock and adequate source control where optimal duration of therapy is unclear, we suggest using procalcitonin AND clinical evaluation to decide when to discontinue antimicrobials over clinical evaluation alone
|
Weak recommendation, low quality of evidence
|
Rationale
Shorter durations of antimicrobial therapy are in general recommended; however, critically ill patients often receive antimicrobials for more days than necessary [288, 301, 306]. While typically clinical evaluation alone is used to decide duration, biomarkers could offer additional information. C Reactive Protein is often used in this regard. Procalcitonin has been studied most extensively both in critically ill and non-critically ill patients, both for initiation and discontinuation of therapy [307].
We identified direct evidence from 14 RCTs (n = 4499 patients) that assessed use of procalcitonin to guide antimicrobial treatment duration in patients with sepsis (two trials included critically ill patients in general) [308,309,310,311,312,313,314,315,316,317,318,319,320,321]. A meta-analysis suggested improved mortality in patients who were managed using procalcitonin versus control (RR 0.89; 95% CI 0.80–0.99), while there was no effect on length of stay in ICU or hospital. Antibiotic exposure was consistently lower in patients who were managed with procalcitonin and clinical evaluation, however, in many trials the total duration of therapy was still 7 days or longer in the intervention group. Also, the algorithms for antimicrobial therapy, frequency of procalcitonin monitoring and the thresholds (or percentage change in procalcitonin concentration) for discontinuation differed across the trials. Therefore, the overall quality of evidence was judged to be low.
The undesirable effects of using procalcitonin along with clinical evaluation to decide when to discontinue antimicrobials are considered minimal, and do not outweigh the potential benefits [322]. Limited data on the cost-effectiveness are available, although a single centre study reported decreased hospital costs associated with PCT-guided antibiotic in medical ICU patient with undifferentiated sepsis [323]. Procalcitonin testing may not be available in all countries and healthcare settings, including LMICs.
Based on apparent benefit and no obvious undesirable effects, we suggest using procalcitonin along with clinical evaluation to decide when to discontinue antimicrobials in adults with an initial diagnosis of sepsis or septic shock and adequate source control, if the optimal duration of therapy is unclear and if procalcitonin is available.