Derivation, Validation, and Potential Treatment Implications of Novel Clinical Phenotypes for Sepsis
University of Pittsburgh · Berry & Associates (United States) · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Sepsis is a heterogeneous syndrome. Identification of distinct clinical phenotypes may allow more precise therapy and improve care.
To derive sepsis phenotypes from clinical data, determine their reproducibility and correlation with host-response biomarkers and clinical outcomes, and assess the potential causal relationship with results from randomized clinical trials (RCTs). Design, Settings, and Participants: Retrospective analysis of data sets using statistical, machine learning, and simulation tools. Phenotypes were derived among 20 189 total patients (16 552 unique patients) who met Sepsis-3 criteria within 6 hours of hospital presentation at 12 Pennsylvania hospitals (2010-2012) using consensus k means clustering applied to 29 variables. Reproducibility and correlation with biological parameters and clinical outcomes were assessed in a second database (2013-2014; n = 43 086 total patients and n = 31 160 unique patients), in a prospective cohort study of sepsis due to pneumonia (n = 583), and in 3 sepsis RCTs (n = 4737). Exposures: All clinical and laboratory variables in the electronic health record. Main Outcomes and Measures: Derived phenotype (α, β, γ, and δ) frequency, host-response biomarkers, 28-day and 365-day mortality, and RCT simulation outputs.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 100.94
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 39
Authors
22Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Sepsis
- Cohort
- Randomized controlled trial
- Internal medicine
- Retrospective cohort study
- Clinical trial
- Cohort study
- Good health and well-being