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An SCCM task force used an extensive approach to develop the most comprehensive and up-to-date criteria for defining sepsis and septic shock in children.
Children make up nearly half of patients with sepsis. Those younger than five years are at greatest risk, especially if they live in areas with few resources.1 Sepsis is a global health problem, and researchers and clinicians have called for updated definitions of sepsis in pediatric patients. The Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) responded by convening the SCCM Pediatric Sepsis Definition Task Force. The task force used an extensive approach to developing the most comprehensive and up-to-date criteria, which were published in JAMA in February 2024.2 The article details the new Phoenix criteria for sepsis in children. Members of the task force conducted the session, “Announcement of the Novel Phoenix Pediatric Sepsis Criteria,” at SCCM’s 2024 Critical Care Congress. Speakers outlined the new criteria and the methods used to develop them. The new criteria were developed to replace 2005 criteria written by members of the International Consensus Conference on Pediatric Sepsis. The 2005 criteria were based on expert opinion but lacked data-driven evidence as well as input from clinicians working in lower-resource countries.3 The criteria characterized sepsis as infection in the presence of systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) and defined severe sepsis as sepsis with cardiovascular or respiratory organ dysfunction or dysfunction of at least two other organ systems. The limitations of these criteria became increasingly controversial, and they were inconsistently applied in clinical practice and research. The SCCM Pediatric Sepsis Definition Task Force set out to perform a systematic review and global survey, followed by a comprehensive data-driven derivation and validation process, to revise criteria for sepsis in children. Focusing on identifying children at the highest risk for life-threatening infection, the SCCM task force developed a new assessment system for organ dysfunction called the Phoenix Sepsis Score. They determined that children with a Phoenix Sepsis Score of at least 2 points (indicating potentially life-threatening dysfunction of the respiratory, cardiovascular, coagulation and/or neurologic systems) had in-hospital mortality of 7.1% in higher-resource settings and 28.5% in lower-resource settings, which was more than eight times that of children with suspected infection who did not meet those criteria. The new criteria do not include the term SIRS (which has poor predictive value) or severe sepsis (which is redundant under the new criteria). The new criteria apply to children younger than 18 years but not to newborns or those born before 37 weeks. A Real-World Approach to Defining Pediatric Sepsis In 2016, the Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis and Septic Shock drew from data on more than 150,000 adults with suspected sepsis to define sepsis as life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by dysregulated host response to infection, but it did not include children.4 Sepsis in children varies from that in adults, including differences in vital signs based on age and developmental age-dependent immune function, as well as differences in comorbidities, epidemiology, and outcomes. There was clearly a need for new sepsis definitions and criteria in children based on updated, validated data. The new definitions and criteria are based on objective, data-driven, and standardized information that identify sepsis and septic shock in children applicable in most settings worldwide. The SCCM task force comprises 35 members from 12 countries representing various specialties, including critical care, emergency medicine, pediatrics, and infectious disease. They used a three-pronged approach to develop the new criteria:
Posted: 8/21/2024 | 0 comments
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