# Relation between initial hypothermia, course of the hypothermia and mortality in patients with septic shock: a post-hoc analysis of the SEPSISPAM randomized trial

**Authors:** Louis Bordeau, Valérie Seegers, Julien Demiselle, Frédérique Schortgen, Fabien Grelon, Bruno Mégarbane, Nadia Anguel, Jean-Paul Mira, Pierre-François Dequin, Soizic Gergaud, Nicolas Weiss, François Legay, Yves Le Tulzo, Marie Conrad, Remi Coudroy, Frédéric Gonzalez, Christophe Guitton, Fabienne Tamion, Jean-Marie Tonnelier, Jean Pierre Bedos, Thierry Van Der Linden, Antoine Vieillard-Baron, Eric Mariotte, Gaël Pradel, Olivier Lesieur, Jean-Damien Ricard, Fabien Hervé, Damien du Cheyron, Claude Guerin, Alain Mercat, Jean-Louis Teboul, Peter Radermacher, Pierre Asfar, Nicolas Fage

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.aicoj.2026.100051 · 2026-03-18

## TL;DR

This study found that hypothermia in septic shock patients, especially if it persists, is linked to higher 90-day mortality.

## Contribution

The study identifies distinct hypothermia trajectories and their association with mortality in septic shock patients.

## Key findings

- Hypothermia at inclusion was associated with a 92% higher mortality risk compared to normothermic patients.
- Persistent hypothermia during the first 24 hours was linked to a 78% mortality rate at day 90.
- Mortality increased with the severity of hypothermia trajectory, from 40% in normothermic to 78% in persistent hypothermia.

## Abstract

In patients with septic shock as well as in the critically ill, the impact of hypothermia and core temperature changes during the first 24 h on mortality remains uncertain. In this post-hoc analysis of the SEPSISPAM trial, we investigated the association between hypothermia at inclusion, hypothermia trajectories and 90-day mortality in patients with septic shock.

This post-hoc analysis of the SEPSISPAM trial included patients with septic shock enrolled within 6 h of vasopressors initiation. Core temperature was assessed every 2 h during the first 24 h. Hypothermia was defined by a temperature <36 °C. Mortality was assessed at day 90.

We included 691 patients from the SEPSISPAM trial, of whom 103 (14.9%) presented with hypothermia at inclusion. After adjustment for confounding factors, as compared with patients without hypothermia at inclusion, patients with hypothermia at inclusion had a higher mortality (HR 1.92, 95% CI [1.38–2.67], p < 0.001). Three groups of patients were identified according to the evolution of their core temperature: “without hypothermia” (86.6%), i.e., patients without any hypothermia during the first 24 h; “transient hypothermia” (10%), i.e., patients with hypothermia at inclusion and becoming normothermic during the first 24 h, and “persistent hypothermia” (3.4%), i.e., patients with sustained hypothermia both at inclusion and during the first 24 h. Compared with patients without hypothermia, the “persistent hypothermia” group had the highest mortality rate at day 90 (78.3%, HR 2.83 [1.62−4.95], p < 0.0001). Mortality at day 90 increased according to temperature trajectories, being highest in patients with persistent hypothermia (78%), followed by those with transient hypothermia (49%), and lowest in patients without hypothermia (40%).

In patients with septic shock, hypothermia at inclusion and persistence of hypothermia during the first 24 h were associated with higher mortality at day 90. Mortality increased according to the course of hypothermia during the first 24 h, being highest in patients with persistent hypothermia, followed by those with transient hypothermia, and lowest in patients who never developed hypothermia.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** critically ill (MESH:D016638), Mortality (MESH:D003643), septic shock (MESH:D012772), Hypothermia (MESH:D007035)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13015728/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13015728