Abstract

Sepsis is a common condition that is associated with unacceptably high mortality and, for many of those who survive, long-term morbidity. Increased awareness of the condition resulting from ongoing campaigns and the evidence arising from research in the past 10 years have increased understanding of this problem among clinicians and lay people, and have led to improved outcomes. The World Health Assembly and WHO made sepsis a global health priority in 2017 and have adopted a resolution to improve the prevention, diagnosis, and management of sepsis. In 2016, a new definition of sepsis (Sepsis-3) was developed. Sepsis is now defined as infection with organ dysfunction. This definition codifies organ dysfunction using the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score. Ongoing research aims to improve definition of patient populations to allow for individualised management strategies matched to a patient's molecular and biochemical profile. The search continues for improved diagnostic techniques that can facilitate this aim, and for a pharmacological agent that can improve outcomes by modifying the disease process. While waiting for this goal to be achieved, improved basic care driven by education and quality-improvement programmes offers the best hope of increasing favourable outcomes.

Keywords

SepsisIntensive care medicineMedicineSeptic shockOrgan dysfunctionDiseaseSurviving Sepsis CampaignShock (circulatory)Health careMEDLINESevere sepsisImmunologyInternal medicine

MeSH Terms

Biomedical ResearchHumansOrgan Dysfunction ScoresPrecision MedicineSepsisShockSepticSurvival Rate

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2018
Type
review
Volume
392
Issue
10141
Pages
75-87
Citations
1999
Access
Closed

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1999
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21
Influential
1779
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Cite This

Maurizio Cecconi, Laura Evans, Mitchell M. Levy et al. (2018). Sepsis and septic shock. The Lancet , 392 (10141) , 75-87. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(18)30696-2

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/s0140-6736(18)30696-2
PMID
29937192

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%