Serum phosphate and 28-day mortality in adult sepsis with E.Coli infection: A critical care database study
Ju Luo, Shifang Zhou, Ning Ding

TL;DR
This study finds that higher serum phosphate levels are linked to increased 28-day mortality in adult sepsis patients with E.Coli infections, using a critical care database.
Contribution
The study identifies a novel association between elevated serum phosphate and higher mortality in E.Coli sepsis patients.
Findings
A positive relationship between serum phosphate and 28-day mortality was observed in E.Coli sepsis patients.
When serum phosphate exceeds 2.1 mg/dl, mortality risk increases significantly (OR=1.55).
Abstract
In this study, we aimed to explore the relationship between serum phosphate and clinical outcomes in sepsis with E.Coli infection based on a public database in order to help physicians do individualized medical decisions. We performed this retrospective study based on the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care IV(MIMIC-IV) database (https://mimic.mit.edu/iv/). All the patients were hospitalized and serum phosphate was measured in 24 hours after hospitalization. E.Coli infection was confirmed by the positive blood culture of E.Coli in the database. Three models were utilized to investigate the relationship between serum phosphate and mortality in sepsis as follows: crude model (adjusted for none), model I (adjusted for age and gender) and model II (adjusted for all potential confounders). The smooth fitting curve was performed by the generalized additive model. 421 adult sepsis…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSepsis Diagnosis and Treatment · Renal function and acid-base balance · Pancreatitis Pathology and Treatment
