Past history of stage I/II solid tumor malignancy impacts considerably on sepsis mortality: A propensity score matching analysis from the hellenic sepsis study group

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Abstract

Background: Whether past history of solid stage I/II inactive cancer has an impact on 28-day mortality of sepsis remains unclear. We aimed to determine the impact of history of stage I or II solid tumor malignancy in complete remission the last 3 years on sepsis outcome. Methods: Using the database of the Hellenic Sepsis Study Group from 1553 patients with sepsis admitted in the ICU, 83 patients with sepsis by Sepsis-3 definition with past-history of stage I/II inactive solid malignancy the last 3 years were depicted. A comparator group of 83 patients fully matched for age, severity, type of infection and comorbidities was selected by propensity score matching. Results: Mortality after 28 days was 37.3% in the comparator group and 54.2% in the solid tumor stage I/II group (odds ratio for death 1.98; p: 0.030). Following step-wise forward Cox regression analysis, septic shock (hazard ratio 1.80), acute renal injury (hazard ratio 2.06), history of coronary heart disease (hazard ratio 0.36) and history of stage I/II solid tumor malignancy (hazard ratio 1.79) were the only independent variables associated with 28-day mortality. Serum levels of procalcitonin and of soluble urokinase plasminogen activator receptor were similar between the two groups of comparisons. Conclusions: Past history of stage I/II solid malignancy is an independent risk factor for unfavorable outcome from sepsis the first 28 days.

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Dimpoulos, G., Rovina, N., Patrani, M., Antoniadou, E., Konstantonis, D., Vryza, K., … Giamarellos-Bourboulis, E. J. (2019). Past history of stage I/II solid tumor malignancy impacts considerably on sepsis mortality: A propensity score matching analysis from the hellenic sepsis study group. BMC Infectious Diseases, 19(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-019-4448-7

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