@article{11762, keywords = {Diagnosis, Infection, Sepsis, Source}, author = {Toshikazu Abe and Yasuharu Tokuda and Atsushi Shiraishi and Seitaro Fujishima and Toshihiko Mayumi and Takehiro Sugiyama and Gautam A. Deshpande and Yasukazu Shiino and Toru Hifumi and Yasuhiro Otomo and Kohji Okamoto and Joji Kotani and Yuichiro Sakamoto and Junichi Sasaki and Shin-Ichiro Shiraishi and Kiyotsugu Takuma and Akiyoshi Hagiwara and Kazuma Yamakawa and Naoshi Takeyama and Satoshi Gando and JAAM SPICE Study Group}, title = {In-hospital mortality associated with the misdiagnosis or unidentified site of infection at admission.}, abstract = {

BACKGROUND: Rapid detection, early resuscitation, and appropriate antibiotic use are crucial for sepsis care. Accurate identification of the site of infection may facilitate a timely provision of appropriate care. We aimed to investigate the relationship between misdiagnosis of the site of infection at initial examination and in-hospital mortality.

METHODS: This was a secondary-multicenter prospective cohort study involving 37 emergency departments. Consecutive adult patients with infection from December 2017 to February 2018 were included. Misdiagnosis of the site of infection was defined as a discrepancy between the suspected site of infection at initial examination and that at final diagnosis, including those infections remaining unidentified during hospital admission, whereas correct diagnosis was defined as site concordance. In-hospital mortality was compared between those misdiagnosed and those correctly diagnosed.

RESULTS: Of 974 patients included in the analysis, 11.6% were misdiagnosed. Patients diagnosed with lung, intra-abdominal, urinary, soft tissue, and CNS infection at the initial examination, 4.2%, 3.8%, 13.6%, 10.9%, and 58.3% respectively, turned out to have an infection at a different site. In-hospital mortality occurred in 15%. In both generalized estimating equation (GEE) and propensity score-matched models, misdiagnosed patients exhibited higher mortality despite adjustment for patient background, site infection, and severity. The adjusted odds ratios (misdiagnosis vs. correct diagnosis) for in-hospital mortality were 2.66 (95% CI, 1.45-4.89) in the GEE model and 3.03 (95% CI, 1.24-7.38) in the propensity score-matched model. The difference in the absolute risk in the GEE model was 0.11 (0.04-0.18).

CONCLUSIONS: Among patients with infection, misdiagnosed site of infection is associated with a > 10% increase in in-hospital mortality.

}, year = {2019}, journal = {Crit Care}, volume = {23}, pages = {202}, month = {06/2019}, issn = {1466-609X}, doi = {10.1186/s13054-019-2475-9}, language = {eng}, }