Corticosteroid therapy for sepsis: A clinical practice guideline
Lamontagne, François; Rochwerg, Bram; Lytvyn, Lyubov; Guyatt, Gordon H.; Møller, Morten Hylander; Annane, Djillali; Kho, Michelle E.; Adhikari, Neill K. J.; MacHado, Flavia; Vandvik, Per Olav; Dodek, Peter; Leboeuf, Rebecca; Briel, Matthias; Hashmi, Madiha; Camsooksai, Julie; Shankar-Hari, Manu; Baraki, Mahder Kinfe; Fugate, Karie; Chua, Shunjie; Marti, Christophe; Cohen, DIan; Botton, Edouard; Agoritsas, Thomas; Siemieniuk, Reed Alexander C.
Peer reviewed, Journal article
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https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2657372Utgivelsesdato
2019Metadata
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Sammendrag
Do corticosteroids reduce death or improve recovery in people with sepsis or septic shock? Our panel make a weak recommendation to give corticosteroids to people with all types and severity of sepsis, based on new evidence. Because we are not certain that they are beneficial, it is also reasonable not to prescribe them. Patients’ values and preferences may guide this decision-making process. This rapid recommendation was triggered by two
trials, with differing conclusions whose results might change practice: • ADRENAL (3658 patients who had septic shock) found no statistically significant difference in 90 day mortality between the hydrocortisone and placebo groups.1
• APROCCHSS (1241 patients who had septic shock) found that hydrocortisone plus fludrocortisone reduced 90 day mortality.2 The trials are incorporated into a linked systematic review comparing corticosteroids with placebo.3
This BMJ Rapid Recommendation promptly
and transparently translates this evidence using GRADE methodology for trustworthy guidelines. Sepsis is a life threatening organ dysfunction from infection. C urrently most guidelines advise against
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
• Sepsis is a syndrome of life threatening infection with organ dysfunction, and most guidelines do not advise use of corticosteroids to treat it in the absence of refractory shock
• Two new trials of corticosteroid treatment for sepsis came to differing conclusions
• Corticosteroids may reduce the risk of death by a small amount and increase neuromuscular weakness by a small amount, but the evidence is not definitive
• This guideline makes a weak recommendation for corticosteroids in patients with sepsis; both steroids and no steroids are reasonable management options
• Fully informed patients who value avoiding death over quality of life and function would likely choose corticosteroids
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giving corticosteroids in sepsis in the absence of refractory shock, but these guidelines have not taken into account the new evidence. We do not anticipate that new clinical trials will substantively alter the evidence suggesting a small but uncertain mortality reduction. The box below shows publications linked in this Rapid Recommendation package. The main infographic provides an overview of the absolute benefits and harms. The table at the end of the article shows any evidence that has emerged since the publication of this guideline.