Management of Children With Fever at Risk for Pediatric Sepsis: A Prospective Study in Pediatric Emergency Care
Ruud Nijman, Rikke Jorgensen, Michael Levin, Jethro Herberg, Ian Maconochie
Abstract
Objective To study warning signs of serious infections in febrile children presenting to PED, ascertain their risk of having sepsis, and evaluate their management. Design Prospective observational study Setting a single paediatric emergency department (PED) Participants febrile children, aged 1 month – 16 years, with >= 1 warning signs of sepsis Interventions and Main outcome measures Clinical characteristics, including different thresholds for tachycardia and tachypnoea, and their association with 1) delivery of paediatric sepsis 6 (PS6) interventions, 2) final diagnosis of invasive bacterial infection (IBI), 3) the risk for paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) admission, and 4) death. Results Forty-one percent of 5,156 febrile children had warning signs of sepsis. 1,606 (34%) children had tachypnoea and 1,907 (39%) children had tachycardia when using APLS threshold values (table 1). Using the NICE sepsis guidelines thresholds resulted in 1,512 (32%) children having tachypnoea (kappa 0.56) and 2,769 (57%) children having tachycardia (kappa 0.66). Of 1,628 PED visits spanning 1,551 disease episodes, six children (0.4%) had IBI, with one death (0.06%), corresponding with 256 children requiring escalation of care according to sepsis guideline recommendations for each child with IBI. There were five additional PICU admissions (0.4%). 121 (7%) had intravenous antibiotics in PED; 39 children (2%) had an intravenous fluid bolus, inotrope drugs were started in one child. 440 children (27%) were reviewed by a senior clinician. In 4/11 children with IBI or PICU admission or death, PS6 interventions were delivered within 60 minutes after arriving. 1,062 (65%) visits had no PS6 interventions. Diagnostic performance of vital signs or sepsis criteria for predicting serious illness yielded a large proportion of false positives. Lactataemia was not associated with giving iv fluid boluses (p=0.19) or presence of serious bacterial infections (p=0.128). Conclusion Many febrile children (41%) present with warning signs for sepsis, with only few of them undergoing investigations or treatment for true sepsis. Children with positive isolates in blood or CSF presented in a heterogeneous manner, with varying levels of urgency and severity of illness. Delivery of sepsis care can be improved in only a minority of children with IBI or admitted to PICU.