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Establishment of SEP-1 national practice guidelines does not impact fluid administration for septic shock patients - 24/11/22

Doi : 10.1016/j.ajem.2022.09.038 
Eric Boccio, MD a, , Adrian Haimovich, MD, PhD b , Vinitha Jacob, MD, PhD c , Xiwen Zhao, BS, MS d , Charles R. Wira, MD b , Arjun Venkatesh, MD, MBA, MHS b , Justin Belsky, MD, MPH b
a Department of Emergency Medicine, UMass Chan Medical School – Baystate, Springfield, MA, USA 
b Department of Emergency Medicine, Yale New Haven Hospital, New Haven, CT, USA 
c Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA 
d Yale Center for Analytical Sciences, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA 

Corresponding author at: UMass Chan Medical School – Baystate, Department of Emergency Medicine, 759 Chestnut Street, Springfield, MA 01199, USA.UMass Chan Medical School – BaystateDepartment of Emergency Medicine759 Chestnut StreetSpringfieldMA01199USA

Abstract

Background

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services introduced the Early Management Bundle, Severe Sepsis/Septic Shock (SEP-1) as a national quality measure in October 2015. The purpose of SEP-1 is to facilitate the efficient, effective, and timely delivery of high-quality care to patients presenting along the spectrum of sepsis severity.

Objectives: The primary aim of this study was to investigate whether provider practice surrounding emergency department (ED) fluid management of suspected septic shock patients was impacted by SEP-1.

Methods

The study was a retrospective observational analysis of 470,558 patient encounters at an urban academic center over a five-year period. The sample of suspected septic shock patients was defined by the following: blood cultures collected, antibiotics administered, and vasopressors initiated. Participants were divided into two cohorts based on date of presentation (Pre-SEP-1: May 1, 2013, − August 30, 2015, and Post-SEP-1: November 1, 2015, − February 28, 2018). The primary outcome was classified as a dichotomous variable based on whether the total volume of fluids administered equaled or exceeded the calculated weight-based (≥30 cc/kg) goal. Segmented logistic regression analyses were used to assess the immediate impact of SEP-1 as well as to compare the long-term trend of fluid volume administered between Pre-SEP-1 and Post-SEP-1 cohorts.

Results

A total of 413 and 482 septic shock patients were included in the Pre-SEP-1 and Post-SEP-1 cohorts, respectively. There was no statistically significant change in weight-based fluid management between the cohorts. The odds of compliance with the weight-based goal decreased 22% immediately following dissemination of SEP-1, however, this was not statistically significant (log-odds = −0.25, p = 0.41). A positive trend in compliance was observed during both the Pre-SEP-1 and Post-SEP-1 periods with odds ratios increasing 0.005 and 0.018 each month, respectively, however, these findings were not statistically significant (log-odds = 0.005, p = 0.736, and log-odds = 0.018, p = 0.10, respectively).

Conclusions

Overall, there were no clinically or statistically meaningful changes in fluid volume resuscitation strategies for suspected septic shock patients following SEP-1. Broad mandates may not be effective tools for promoting practice change in the ED setting. Further research investigating barrier to changes in practice patterns surrounding fluid administration and other SEP-1 bundle elements is warranted.

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

Highlights

Why is this topic important? Results are presented at a critical juncture given recent changes to weight-based fluid recommendations and exemptions.
What does this study attempt to show? To determine whether weight-based fluid management of septic shock patients changed following the dissemination of SEP-1.
What are the key findings? No clinically or statistically significant changes to weight-based fluid volume management strategies of septic shock patients were detected in the immediate and long-term periods following SEP-1 mandated reporting.
How is patient care impacted? We must investigate further the effectiveness of national core measures in initiating change to provider practice while elucidating barriers on individual, departmental, institutional, and national levels.

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

Keywords : Septic shock, SEP-1, Fluid bundle metric, Weight-based fluid management, Core measures


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Vol 62

P. 19-24 - décembre 2022 Retour au numéro
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