Surviving Sepsis Campaign Adult Guidelines (2021) Released

The Surviving Sepsis 
Campaign<https://www.sccm.org/SurvivingSepsisCampaign/Home> adult sepsis 
guidelines, published in Critical Care 
Medicine<https://doi.org/10.1097/CCM.0000000000005337> and Intensive Care 
Medicine <https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00134-021-06506-y> reflect 
best practices and recommendations for the treatment of sepsis and septic shock 
in adults and are revised regularly to account for new research. The new 
guidelines specially address challenges to treating patients experiencing the 
long-term effects of sepsis are also addressed in the guidelines. Patients 
often have lengthy ICU stays and then face a long and complicated road to 
recovery. In addition to physical rehabilitation challenges, patients and their 
families often are uncertain how to coordinate care that promotes recovery and 
matches their goals of care.

To address these issues, the guidelines recommend involving patients and their 
families in goals-of-care discussions and hospital discharge plans, which 
should include early and ongoing follow-up with clinicians to support and 
manage long-term effects and assessment of physical, cognitive, and emotional 
issues after discharge.

"Treatment for sepsis goes beyond in-hospital care," said Laura E. Evans, MD, 
MSc, FCCM, SSC adult guidelines cochair. "Many sepsis survivors experience 
short- and long-term consequences such as cognitive or physical disability. 
Ongoing recovery can take months or years. It's essential to develop a plan to 
address these long-term consequences when a patient is discharged."

Early identification remains crucial to effective sepsis treatment. A new 
recommendation in the guidelines is to use a performance improvement program, 
including a screening tool such as the Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome 
(SIRS), National Early Warning Score (NEWS) or Modified Early Warning Score 
(MEWS), rather than the Quick Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (qSOFA).

"The guidelines emphasize that having a systematic applied screening process is 
essential to recognizing patients with sepsis early," said Waleed Alhazzani, 
MD, MSc, FRCPC, adult guidelines methodology chair. "If you don't look for it, 
you might miss sepsis, but the clock is ticking and time matters, so patients 
should constantly be reevaluated for where they are and what they need next."

Long-term treatment recommendations include:

  *   Discussing goals of care and prognosis with patients and families
  *   Integrating principles of palliative care (which may include palliative 
care consultation based on clinician judgement) into the treatment plan, when 
appropriate, to address patient and family symptoms and suffering
  *   Referral to peer support groups for patients and their families
  *   Screening for economic and social support (including housing, 
nutritional, financial, and spiritual support), and referrals where available 
to meet these needs
  *   Written and verbal sepsis education (diagnosis, treatment, and 
post-ICU/post-sepsis syndrome) before hospital discharge and in the follow-up 
setting
  *   Opportunity for the patient and family to participate in shared 
decision-making in post-ICU and hospital discharge planning to ensure that 
discharge plans are acceptable and feasible

Other guidelines recommendations include:

  *   Screening and early treatment of sepsis remain critical. The guidelines 
recommend using a performance improvement program for sepsis, including sepsis 
screening for acutely ill, high-risk patients and standard operating procedures 
for treatment.
  *   The guidelines suggest against using IV vitamin C for adults with sepsis 
or septic shock.
  *   The guidelines suggest starting vasopressors peripherally to restore mean 
arterial pressure rather than delaying initiation until central venous access 
is secured.
  *   For adults with sepsis-induced severe acute respiratory distress 
syndrome, the guidelines suggest using venovenous extraxorporeal membrane 
oxygenation when conventional mechanical ventilation fails in experienced 
centers with the infrastructure in place to support its use.

The updated version of the guidelines includes input from a diverse panel of 60 
experts and a survey of more than 800 intensivists from more than 30 countries. 
The workgroup that developed the guidelines was significantly more diverse than 
previous workgroups, with more women, better representation from low-income 
countries, and more patient and family representatives. Additionally, 
healthcare professionals from around the world were surveyed to help the 
workgroup better understand and address practice variations in resource-poor 
areas.

"A more diverse panel of experts helps to minimize bias and ensure that the 
recommendations are more inclusive," said Professor Andrew Rhodes, FRCP, FRCA, 
FFICM, guidelines cochair. "While much of the evidence we have on best 
practices to treat sepsis comes from higher-income countries, the burden of 
sepsis is predominantly in lower-income countries. The guidelines address 
resource challenges unique to lower-income countries, such as access to some 
medications."

The SSC is a joint initiative of the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) 
and the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine (ESICM), which are 
committed to reducing death and disability from sepsis and septic shock 
worldwide.





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