Epidemiology of sepsis in cancer patients in Victoria, Australia: a population‐based study using linked data

Abstract Objective: To determine the clinical characteristics, outcomes and longitudinal trends of sepsis occurring in cancer patients. Method: Retrospective study using statewide Victorian Cancer Registry data linked to various administrative datasets. Results: Among 215,763 incident cancer patient...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Luc te Marvelde (Author), Ann Whitfield (Author), Jennie Shepheard (Author), Carla Read (Author), Roger L. Milne (Author), Kathryn Whitfield (Author)
Format: Book
Published: Elsevier, 2020-02-01T00:00:00Z.
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Summary:Abstract Objective: To determine the clinical characteristics, outcomes and longitudinal trends of sepsis occurring in cancer patients. Method: Retrospective study using statewide Victorian Cancer Registry data linked to various administrative datasets. Results: Among 215,763 incident cancer patients, incidence of sepsis within one year of cancer diagnosis was estimated at 6.4%. The incidence of sepsis was higher in men, younger patients, patients diagnosed with haematological malignancies and those with de novo metastatic disease. Of the 13,316 patients with a first admission with sepsis, 55% had one or more organ failures, 29% required care within an intensive care unit and 13% required mechanical ventilation. Treatments associated with the highest sepsis incidence were stem cell/bone marrow transplant (33%), major surgery (4.4%), chemotherapy (1.1%) and radical radiotherapy (0.6%). The incidence of sepsis with organ failure increased between 2008 and 2015, while 90‐day mortality decreased. Conclusions: Sepsis in patients with cancer has high mortality and occurs most frequently in the first year after cancer diagnosis. Implications for public health: The number of cancer patients diagnosed with sepsis is expected to increase, causing a substantial burden on patients and the healthcare system.
Item Description:1753-6405
1326-0200
10.1111/1753-6405.12935