A recent study University of Michigan led study finds that ten percent of patients hospitalized with sepsis were previously healthy-and many of those who ultimately died did so because it was too late to intervene.
The work, led by Rachel Hechtman, M.D., Hallie Prescott, M.D., and their team, focused on healthy patients as a way to tease out the effects of advanced age, comorbidities and other common risk factors on sepsis outcomes.
Previously healthy patients tended to have less organ failure upon arrival at the hospital and more COVID-19 related sepsis (the study included data from 11/2020 – 10/2024).
Treatment for these patients differed as well, with less adherence to sepsis management practices, such as blood culture collection and timely delivery of antibiotics.
Those who unfortunately died tended to be older, and had more acute respiratory dysfunction, altered mental status and shock upon admission to the hospital.
During their course of treatment, these patients also received vasopressors and invasive mechanical ventilation more often than survivors, notes the authors.
Most of their deaths were deemed to be unpreventable due to how sick they were when they arrived at the hospital.
Overall, almost 10% of previously healthy patients with sepsis died within 90 days of hospitalization.
The study, notes the team, identifies system level opportunities to reduce the rate of death in patients with sepsis.
“Efforts to increase sepsis awareness among the public and first responders would benefit everyone. Some of these tragic deaths among previously healthy people might have been avoided if their illness had been prevented through vaccination or recognized and treated early before they got sick enough to come to the hospital,” said Hechtman.
Reference:
Rachel K. Hechtman, Epidemiologic Characteristics and Management of Sepsis Among Previously Healthy Patients, CHEST Critical Care, DOI:10.1016/j.chstcc.2025.100148.
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