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Outcomes of Sepsis and Septic Shock in Cancer Patients: Focus on Lactate

René López, Rodrigo Pérez‐Araos, Fernanda Baus, Camila Moscoso, Álvaro Ortiz de Salazar, Jerónimo Graf, José Miguel Montes, Suraj Samtani

2021Frontiers in Medicine17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The number of oncological patients (OP) admitted to intensive care units (ICU) for sepsis/septic shock has dramatically increased in recent years. The definition of septic shock has been modified, adding hyperlactatemia as a severity biomarker for mortality. However, it remains poorly reported in septic OP. We performed a retrospective analysis from a prospective database of sepsis/septic shock patients admitted to our ICU between September 2017 and September 2019 and followed until day 90. We identified 251 patients and 31.9% had active oncological comorbidity, mainly solid tumor (81.3%). Septic shock criteria were met for 112 (44.6%). Hyperlactatemia was observed in 136 (54.2%) patients and this was associated with a lower survival rate. Overall 90-day mortality was 15.1%. In OP vs. non-OP, hyperlactatemia was more frequent (65% vs. 49.1%, p = 0.013) and associated with lower survival (65.4% vs. 85.7%, p = 0.046). In OP, poor performance status was also associated with lower survival (HR 7.029 [1.998–24.731], p = 0.002) In an adjusted analysis, cancer was associated with lower 90-day survival (HR 2.690 [1.402–5.160], p = 0.003). In conclusion, septic OP remains a high mortality risk group in whom lactate levels and performance status could help with better risk stratification.

Topics & Concepts

HyperlactatemiaSeptic shockMedicineSepsisInternal medicineComorbidityProspective cohort studyShock (circulatory)Mortality rateSepsis Diagnosis and TreatmentCardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical OutcomesClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills