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Late mortality after sepsis: propensity matched cohort study.


ABSTRACT:

Objectives

 To determine whether late mortality after sepsis is driven predominantly by pre-existing comorbid disease or is the result of sepsis itself.

Deign

 Observational cohort study.

Setting

 US Health and Retirement Study.

Participants

 960 patients aged ?65 (1998-2010) with fee-for-service Medicare coverage who were admitted to hospital with sepsis. Patients were matched to 777 adults not currently in hospital, 788 patients admitted with non-sepsis infection, and 504 patients admitted with acute sterile inflammatory conditions.

Main outcome measures

 Late (31 days to two years) mortality and odds of death at various intervals.

Results

 Sepsis was associated with a 22.1% (95% confidence interval 17.5% to 26.7%) absolute increase in late mortality relative to adults not in hospital, a 10.4% (5.4% to 15.4%) absolute increase relative to patients admitted with non-sepsis infection, and a 16.2% (10.2% to 22.2%) absolute increase relative to patients admitted with sterile inflammatory conditions (P<0.001 for each comparison). Mortality remained higher for at least two years relative to adults not in hospital.

Conclusions

 More than one in five patients who survives sepsis has a late death not explained by health status before sepsis.

SUBMITTER: Prescott HC 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4869794 | biostudies-literature | 2016 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Late mortality after sepsis: propensity matched cohort study.

Prescott Hallie C HC   Osterholzer John J JJ   Langa Kenneth M KM   Angus Derek C DC   Iwashyna Theodore J TJ  

BMJ (Clinical research ed.) 20160517


<h4>Objectives</h4> To determine whether late mortality after sepsis is driven predominantly by pre-existing comorbid disease or is the result of sepsis itself.<h4>Deign</h4> Observational cohort study.<h4>Setting</h4> US Health and Retirement Study.<h4>Participants</h4> 960 patients aged ≥65 (1998-2010) with fee-for-service Medicare coverage who were admitted to hospital with sepsis. Patients were matched to 777 adults not currently in hospital, 788 patients admitted with non-sepsis infection,  ...[more]

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