Point-of-care lactate testing predicts mortality of severe sepsis in a predominantly HIV type 1-infected patient population in Uganda

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Abstract

Background. Prediction of mortality may improve management and outcomes of patients with sepsis in resource-limited settings. Therefore, we evaluated the ability of a hand-held portable whole-blood lactate (PWBL) analyzer to predict mortality of patients who are admitted to the hospital with severe sepsis. Methods. A prospective observational study enrolled 253 patients at a national referral hospital in Uganda. Inclusion criteria required (1) ≥2 systemic inflammatory response syndrome criteria or thermodysregulation, (2) hypotension, and (3) suspected infection. A subset of 72 patients had PWBL and standard laboratory serum lactate measured. The primary measured outcome was in-hospital mortality. Results. Fifty-nine (81.9%) of 72 evaluated patients were infected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1. The in-hospital mortality rate was 25.7% (18 of 70), and the in- and outpatient mortality at 30 days was 41.6% (30 of 72). PWBL was positively associated with in-hospital but not outpatient mortality (P < .001). The receiver operating characteristic area under the curve for PWBL was 0.81 (P <4.0 mmol/L (7.5%) (odds ratio, 12.3; 95% confidence interval, 3.5-48.9; P <4.0 mmol/L. PWBL testing would be useful in places where clinical decisions are limited by lack of laboratory infrastructure and poor reliability. © 2007 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved.

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Moore, C. C., Jacob, S. T., Pinkerton, R., Meya, D. B., Mayanja-Kizza, H., Reynolds, S. J., & Scheld, W. M. (2008). Point-of-care lactate testing predicts mortality of severe sepsis in a predominantly HIV type 1-infected patient population in Uganda. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 46(2), 215–222. https://doi.org/10.1086/524665

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