Susceptibility to childhood sepsis, contemporary management, and future directions.

Lancet Child Adolesc Health

Department of Intensive Care and Neonatology, and Children's Research Center, University Children's Hospital Zurich, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; Child Health Research Centre, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia. Electronic address:

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • * Pediatric patients have unique vulnerabilities to sepsis due to factors like their developing immune systems, genetic predispositions, and differing environmental influences, which make their management different from adults.
  • * Effective treatment for pediatric sepsis focuses on diagnosis, early resuscitation, and advanced care, but there are significant gaps in research and quality improvement efforts, with digital health offering potential solutions to enhance care and outcomes.

Article Abstract

Sepsis disproportionally affects children across all health-care settings and is one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in neonatal and paediatric age groups. As shown in the first paper in this Series, the age-specific incidence of sepsis is highest during the first years of life, before approaching adult incidence rates during adolescence. In the second paper in this Series, we focus on the unique susceptibility of paediatric patients to sepsis and how the underlying dysregulated host response relates to developmental aspects of children's immune system, genetic, perinatal, and environmental factors, and comorbidities and socioeconomic determinants of health, which often differ between children and adults. State-of-the-art clinical management of paediatric sepsis is organised around three treatment pillars-diagnosis, early resuscitation, and titration of advanced care-and we examine available treatment guidelines and the limitations of their supporting evidence. Serious evidence gaps remain in key areas of paediatric sepsis care, especially surrounding recognition, common interventions, and survivor support, and to this end we offer a research roadmap for the next decade that could accelerate targeted diagnostics and personalised use of immunomodulation. However, improving outcomes for children with sepsis relies fundamentally on systematic quality improvement in both recognition and treatment, which is the theme of the third paper in this Series. Digital health, as shown in the fourth and final paper of this Series, holds promising potential in breaking down the barriers that hinder progress in paediatric sepsis care and, ultimately, global child health.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2352-4642(24)00141-XDOI Listing

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