Search
Optimal Timing of Source Control in Sepsis
- Sepsis is the most common critical illness encountered in the emergency department.
- Much of the resuscitation of patients with sepsis is focused on early and appropriate antibiotic administration, appropriate fluid resuscitation, vasopressor support, and continued hemodynamic monitoring.
- Another critical pillar in sepsis resuscitation is source control. To date, there is varying literature on the optimal timing of source control in sepsis.
- In a recent cohort study of approximately 5,000 patients with community-acquired sepsis, Reitz and colleagues report a 29% reduction in risk-adjusted odds of 90-day mortality for patients who had early source control (< 6 hours) compared to those with late source control (6-36 hours).
- The greatest reduction in risk-adjusted 90-day mortality with early source control occurred in patients with gastrointestinal/abdominal and soft-tissue sources of infection.
- Take Home Pearl: Early source control matters in sepsis resuscitation, especially in sicker patients with a GI or soft-tissue source of infection.
References
Reitz KM, et al. Association between time to source control in sepsis and 90-day mortality. JAMA Surgery. 2022; 157:817-826.