Epidemiology of sepsis in a Japanese administrative database

Abstract Sepsis is the leading cause of death worldwide. Considering regional variations in the characteristics of patients with sepsis, a better understanding of the epidemiology in Japan will lead to further development of strategies for the prevention and treatment of sepsis. To investigate the e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Taro Imaeda, Takehiko Oami, Nozomi Takahashi, Daiki Saito, Akiko Higashi, Taka‐aki Nakada
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2023-01-01
Series:Acute Medicine & Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ams2.890
_version_ 1827397246962892800
author Taro Imaeda
Takehiko Oami
Nozomi Takahashi
Daiki Saito
Akiko Higashi
Taka‐aki Nakada
author_facet Taro Imaeda
Takehiko Oami
Nozomi Takahashi
Daiki Saito
Akiko Higashi
Taka‐aki Nakada
author_sort Taro Imaeda
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Sepsis is the leading cause of death worldwide. Considering regional variations in the characteristics of patients with sepsis, a better understanding of the epidemiology in Japan will lead to further development of strategies for the prevention and treatment of sepsis. To investigate the epidemiology of sepsis, we conducted a systematic literature review of PubMed between 2003 and January 2023. Among the 78 studies using a Japanese administrative database, we included 20 that defined patients with sepsis as those with an infection and organ dysfunction. The mortality rate in patients with sepsis has decreased since 2010, reaching 18% in 2017. However, the proportion of inpatients with sepsis is increasing. A study comparing short‐course (≤7 days) and long‐course (≥8 days) antibiotic administration showed lower 28‐day mortality in the short‐course group. Six studies on the treatment of patients with septic shock reported that low‐dose corticosteroids or polymyxin B hemoperfusion reduced mortality, whereas intravenous immunoglobulins had no such effect. Four studies investigating the effects of treatment in patients with sepsis‐associated disseminated intravascular coagulation demonstrated that antithrombin may reduce mortality, whereas recombinant human soluble thrombomodulin does not. A descriptive study of medical costs for patients with sepsis showed that the effective cost per survivor decreased over an 8‐year period from 2010 to 2017. Sepsis has a significant impact on public health, and is attracting attention as an ongoing issue. Further research to determine more appropriate prevention methods and treatment for sepsis should be a matter of priority.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T19:04:32Z
format Article
id doaj.art-2cd7ef13acbb42fd896cc40dc5dd1091
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2052-8817
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-08T19:04:32Z
publishDate 2023-01-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Acute Medicine & Surgery
spelling doaj.art-2cd7ef13acbb42fd896cc40dc5dd10912023-12-28T00:28:39ZengWileyAcute Medicine & Surgery2052-88172023-01-01101n/an/a10.1002/ams2.890Epidemiology of sepsis in a Japanese administrative databaseTaro Imaeda0Takehiko Oami1Nozomi Takahashi2Daiki Saito3Akiko Higashi4Taka‐aki Nakada5Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine Chiba University Graduate School of Medicine Chiba JapanDepartment of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine Chiba University Graduate School of Medicine Chiba JapanDepartment of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine Chiba University Graduate School of Medicine Chiba JapanDepartment of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine Chiba University Graduate School of Medicine Chiba JapanDepartment of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine Chiba University Graduate School of Medicine Chiba JapanDepartment of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine Chiba University Graduate School of Medicine Chiba JapanAbstract Sepsis is the leading cause of death worldwide. Considering regional variations in the characteristics of patients with sepsis, a better understanding of the epidemiology in Japan will lead to further development of strategies for the prevention and treatment of sepsis. To investigate the epidemiology of sepsis, we conducted a systematic literature review of PubMed between 2003 and January 2023. Among the 78 studies using a Japanese administrative database, we included 20 that defined patients with sepsis as those with an infection and organ dysfunction. The mortality rate in patients with sepsis has decreased since 2010, reaching 18% in 2017. However, the proportion of inpatients with sepsis is increasing. A study comparing short‐course (≤7 days) and long‐course (≥8 days) antibiotic administration showed lower 28‐day mortality in the short‐course group. Six studies on the treatment of patients with septic shock reported that low‐dose corticosteroids or polymyxin B hemoperfusion reduced mortality, whereas intravenous immunoglobulins had no such effect. Four studies investigating the effects of treatment in patients with sepsis‐associated disseminated intravascular coagulation demonstrated that antithrombin may reduce mortality, whereas recombinant human soluble thrombomodulin does not. A descriptive study of medical costs for patients with sepsis showed that the effective cost per survivor decreased over an 8‐year period from 2010 to 2017. Sepsis has a significant impact on public health, and is attracting attention as an ongoing issue. Further research to determine more appropriate prevention methods and treatment for sepsis should be a matter of priority.https://doi.org/10.1002/ams2.890administrative databaseclaim databaseDiagnosis Procedure Combinationorgan dysfunctionSepsis‐3
spellingShingle Taro Imaeda
Takehiko Oami
Nozomi Takahashi
Daiki Saito
Akiko Higashi
Taka‐aki Nakada
Epidemiology of sepsis in a Japanese administrative database
Acute Medicine & Surgery
administrative database
claim database
Diagnosis Procedure Combination
organ dysfunction
Sepsis‐3
title Epidemiology of sepsis in a Japanese administrative database
title_full Epidemiology of sepsis in a Japanese administrative database
title_fullStr Epidemiology of sepsis in a Japanese administrative database
title_full_unstemmed Epidemiology of sepsis in a Japanese administrative database
title_short Epidemiology of sepsis in a Japanese administrative database
title_sort epidemiology of sepsis in a japanese administrative database
topic administrative database
claim database
Diagnosis Procedure Combination
organ dysfunction
Sepsis‐3
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ams2.890
work_keys_str_mv AT taroimaeda epidemiologyofsepsisinajapaneseadministrativedatabase
AT takehikooami epidemiologyofsepsisinajapaneseadministrativedatabase
AT nozomitakahashi epidemiologyofsepsisinajapaneseadministrativedatabase
AT daikisaito epidemiologyofsepsisinajapaneseadministrativedatabase
AT akikohigashi epidemiologyofsepsisinajapaneseadministrativedatabase
AT takaakinakada epidemiologyofsepsisinajapaneseadministrativedatabase