Objective
Sepsis hospitalizations are frequently followed by hospital readmissions, often for recurrent sepsis. However, it is unclear how often sepsis readmissions are for relapsed/recrudescent versus new infections. The aim of this study was to assess the extent to which 90-day readmissions for recurrent sepsis are due to infection of the same site and same pathogen as the initial episode.
Design
Retrospective cohort study.
Setting
University of Michigan Health System.
Patients
All hospitalizations (May 15, 2013 to May 14, 2015) with a principal ICD-9-CM diagnosis of septicemia (038.x), severe sepsis (995.92) or septic shock (785.52), as well as all subsequent hospitalizations and sepsis readmissions within 90 days. We determined organism and site of sepsis through manual chart abstraction.
Interventions
None
Measurements and Main Results
We identified 472 readmissions within 90 days of sepsis, of which 137 (29.1%) were for sepsis. In sepsis readmissions, the site and organisms were most commonly urinary (29.2%), gastrointestinal (20.4%), gram negative (29.9%), gram positive (16.8%) and culture negative (30.7%). 94 (68.6%) readmissions were for infection at the same site as initial sepsis hospitalization. 19% of readmissions were confirmed to be same site and same organism. However, accounting for the uncertainty from culture-negative sepsis, as many as 53.2% of readmissions could plausibly due to infections with both the same organism and same site.
Conclusions
Of the patients readmitted with sepsis within 90 days, two thirds had infection at the same site as their initial admission. Just 19% had infection confirmed to be from the same site and organism as the initial sepsis hospitalization. Half of readmissions were definitively for new infections, while an additional 34% were unclear since cultures were negative in one of the hospitalizations.