Sepsis is a leading cause of death, disability, and healthcare costs. Reference Rhee, Dantes and Epstein1–Reference Buchman, Simpson and Sciarretta3 Although most quality improvement efforts have focused on patients presenting to the hospital with sepsis, Reference Raghavan and Marik4–Reference Investigators, Rowan and Angus6 a growing body of literature highlights the high burden of hospital-onset sepsis. Between 10% and 15% of all sepsis cases are acquired in hospitals, translating into >200,000 adult cases annually in the United States. Reference Rhee, Wang and Zhang7–Reference Paoli, Reynolds, Sinha, Gitlin and Crouser9 These patients have crude mortality rates of 20%–30%, twice as high as community-onset sepsis, and they account for >25% of all sepsis-associated deaths in US hospitals. Reference Rhee, Wang and Zhang7,Reference Rhee, Jones and Hamad10 Patients with hospital-onset sepsis also have higher rates of ICU admission, stay in the hospital longer, and incur 3–5-fold greater hospital costs compared to those with community-onset sepsis. Reference Page, Donnelly and Wang8,Reference Paoli, Reynolds, Sinha, Gitlin and Crouser9
Admittedly, much of the dismal prognosis for hospital-onset sepsis is likely attributable to its predilection for patients who are already severely ill. Reference Rhee, Jones and Hamad10 However, in a recent comparison of >95,000 sepsis patients drawn from 136 US hospitals, patients with hospital-onset sepsis had twice the odds of hospital death compared to patients with community-onset sepsis, even after detailed risk-adjustment. Reference Rhee, Wang and Zhang11 This finding suggests that differences in quality of care may also contribute to worse outcomes. Supporting this concern, a retrospective analysis of sepsis patients at 4 California hospitals reported lower bundle-compliance rates and greater delays in antibiotic therapy for those with hospital-onset sepsis. Reference Baghdadi, Wong and Uslan12
Despite these sobering statistics, no national surveillance system for hospital-onset sepsis has been established. This situation contrasts sharply with the enormous effort that hospitals and regulatory agencies spend tracking and reporting a limited subset of healthcare-associated infections (HAIs). The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting Program, for example, requires acute-care hospitals to report central-line–associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs), catheter-associated urinary tract infections (CAUTIs), a subset of surgical site infections (SSIs), methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) bacteremia, and Clostridioides difficile infections to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) and incorporates them into hospital payment program metrics. Reference Hsu, Wang and Broadwell13
One important difference between these reportable HAIs and hospital-onset sepsis is that CDC has developed standardized surveillance definitions for reportable HAIs. In contrast, sepsis surveillance has traditionally been conducted using hospital discharge diagnosis codes. These are unsuitable for hospital benchmarking and quality monitoring, however, because diagnosis and coding practices for sepsis are variable and are changing over time. Reference Rhee, Kadri and Danner14–Reference Rhee and Klompas17 The use of administrative data to track hospital-onset sepsis is further confounded by the need to rely on the presence or absence of present-on-admission indicators, which can also be variably documented and coded. Reference Goldman, Chu, Osmond and Bindman18
Recognizing the need for a more objective method to track sepsis incidence and outcomes, CDC created the “Adult Sepsis Event” (ASE) tool kit in 2018 to support hospitals interested in creating a robust surveillance system using routinely available electronic health record (EHR) data. 19 The ASE definition flags patients with evidence of presumed serious infection (ie, collection of blood cultures and ≥4 consecutive days of antibiotics, or until 1 day prior to death, discharge to hospice, transfer to another hospital, or transition to comfort measures) plus concurrent organ dysfunction (ie, initiation of vasopressors, mechanical ventilation, elevated lactate, change in baseline creatinine or estimated glomerular filtration rate, increase in baseline bilirubin, or decrease in baseline platelet count) (Fig. 1). The ASE definition is based on the framework of sepsis as a suspected infection with concurrent organ dysfunction, according to the Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis and Septic Shock (Sepsis-3), Reference Singer, Deutschman and Seymour20 but it has been optimized for consistent retrospective surveillance across institutions. Reference Rhee, Dantes, Epstein and Klompas21
The ASE definition was developed by a consortium funded by the CDC Prevention Epicenters and was applied to EHR data from >400 diverse hospitals to estimate the US national burden of sepsis. Reference Rhee, Dantes and Epstein1 The ASE was validated using >500 medical record reviews; it had better sensitivity, similar positive predictive value, and more consistent performance over time compared to sepsis diagnosis codes. Reference Rhee, Dantes and Epstein1,Reference Rhee, Kadri, Huang, Murphy, Li, Platt and Klompas22 Another important advantage over administrative data is that the ASE allows for more granular assessment of when a hospitalization sepsis event occurred. Reference Rhee, Dantes and Epstein1,Reference Rhee, Kadri and Danner14 An ASE case is deemed hospital onset if all criteria (blood culture, first antibiotic day, and organ dysfunction) occurred on hospital day 3 or later. The hospital-onset ASE criteria performed well in an additional chart review exercise in 3 hospitals that showed very high positive predictive value for identifying nosocomial infections (as opposed to delayed presentations of present-on-admission infections). These infections had high concordance with the Sepsis-3 criteria as well as the severe sepsis time zero definition used in the CMS Severe Sepsis/Septic Shock Early Management Bundle (SEP-1) measure. Reference Page, Klompas and Chan23
Currently, ASE surveillance is purely optional for hospitals and is not an NHSN metric. But now that this validated and potentially scalable tool is available, should hospitals begin routinely tracking hospital-onset ASEs? And should this surveillance in fact eventually become mandatory?
Several arguments support this idea. First, tracking hospital-onset ASEs provides insight into a much broader array of serious nosocomial infections beyond the select HAIs currently mandated for reporting. Illustrating this point, a retrospective analysis of 282,411 inpatients at 3 Massachusetts hospitals found that 2,301 (0.8%) met hospital-onset ASE criteria while only 1,260 (0.4%) had CMS-reportable HAIs (Fig. 2a). Reference Page, Klompas and Chan23 Furthermore, CMS-reportable HAIs were identified in only 15% of hospital-onset ASEs, and the 29% mortality rates associated with hospital-onset ASEs far exceeded the average mortality rate for the CMS-reportable HAI rate of 13% overall (Fig. 2b). Medical record reviews demonstrated that most hospital-onset ASEs were caused by nonreportable HAIs including non–ventilator-associated, hospital-acquired pneumonia, non-CLABSI bloodstream infections, and intra-abdominal infections other than C. difficile infection.
Second, hospital-onset ASE surveillance is optimized for implementation using routinely captured EHR data. This surveillance could facilitate more efficient and objective surveillance, in contrast to some NHSN HAIs (particularly CLABSIs and SSIs) that require time-consuming and potentially subjective manual reviews. Reference Mayer, Greene and Howell24,Reference Keller, Linkin, Fishman and Lautenbach25 This change would also align with CDC’s growing movement toward objective and ideally fully automatable HAI surveillance including hospital-onset bacteremia, ventilator-associated events, and electronic definitions for non–ventilator-associated, hospital-acquired pneumonia. Reference Magill, Klompas and Balk26–Reference Dantes, Rock and Milstone28
Third, surveillance of hospital-onset ASEs could help facilitate process of care reviews for sepsis arising after admission, an area that remains a large gap in current quality monitoring. Most sepsis cases currently abstracted for SEP-1 are present on admission, not only because most sepsis is community-acquired but also because the measure excludes patients receiving intravenous antibiotics for >24 hours prior to “time zero.” Reference Baghdadi, Brook and Uslan29 Reliably identifying time zero for hospital-onset sepsis cases is also much more challenging than for sepsis present on admission. Reference Rhee, Brown and Jones30 Hospital-onset ASE surveillance can help flag appropriate cases for detailed review and can also narrow the approximate timeframe to review specific time-zero criteria.
To be sure, several potential limitations and knowledge gaps need to be addressed before hospital-onset ASE surveillance becomes routine. First, the preventability of hospital-onset ASEs need to be more clearly established. One advantage of the current definition of reportable HAIs is that they can be tied to specific best practices known to reduce risk (eg, aseptic central venous catheter insertion techniques for CLABSIs, diagnostic and antibiotic stewardship for C.difficile, etc). The breadth of conditions flagged by surveillance of hospital-onset ASEs, in contrast, may not always point to clear action items for preventing subsequent cases. Nonetheless, we believe that opening our collective eyes to the number and breadth of these severe nosocomial infections is an important step to identifying unrecognized gaps in care and catalyzing new innovations. Furthermore, hospital-onset ASE surveillance should complement, not replace, current HAI surveillance. One possible approach might be to develop a tiered system of HAI priority based on whether they also triggered hospital-onset ASE (similar to the tiered approach for superficial vs deep vs organ/space SSIs). Second, robust risk adjustment tools need to be developed for standardized hospital-onset ASE rates before any hospital benchmarking can be considered. Finally, electronic hospital-ASE surveillance requires a reasonably sophisticated EHR system and information technology expertise, and like any automated system requires periodic audits and validation. However, the CDC ASE tool kit contains detailed materials to facilitate implementation. Manual abstraction is also a suboptimal but feasible possibility for smaller facilities given that hospital-onset sepsis affects <1% of all hospitalizations. Reference Rhee, Wang and Zhang11
In conclusion, hospital-onset ASE surveillance provides a validated, standardized mechanism for hospitals to leverage routinely available EHR data to track many severe nosocomial infections that are largely missed by current CMS-reportable HAIs. Future work should focus on characterizing the preventability of hospital-onset ASEs, developing robust case-mix adjustment tools, and facilitating widespread uptake in hospitals with limited resources. Ultimately, we believe that routine—and even mandatory—reporting of hospital-ASEs could help elucidate the full spectrum of serious nosocomial infections, identify new targets for prevention and quality improvement, and catalyze better outcomes for hospitalized patients.
Acknowledgments
None.
Financial support
No financial support was provided relevant to this article.
Conflicts of interest
Drs Rhee and Klompas report (1) grant funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality to conduct research on sepsis surveillance and definitions, and (2) royalties from UpToDate for chapters on unrelated topics. Dr Rhee also reports consulting fees from Pfizer on research unrelated to sepsis.