Objectives: To assess the markers of perfusion which best discriminate
survivors from non-survivors of childhood sepsis and to compare the i
nformation derived from gastric tonometry with conventionally measured
haemodynamic and laboratory parameters. Design: Prospective clinical
study of children with sepsis syndrome or septic shock. Setting: Paedi
atric intensive care unit in a tertiary referral centre. Patients: 31
children with sepsis syndrome or septic shock. Interventions: A tonome
ter was passed into the stomach via the orogastric route. Measurements
and main results: The following data were recorded at admission, 12,
24 and 48 h: heart rate, mean arterial pressure, arterial pH, base def
icit, arterial lactate, gastric intramucosal pH (pHi) and DCO2 (intram
ucosal carbon dioxide tension minus arterial partial pressure of carbo
n dioxide). The principal outcome measure was survival. The secondary
outcome measure was the number of organ systems failing at 48 h after
admission. There were 10 deaths and 21 survivors. No variable discrimi
nated survival from death at presentation. Blood lactate level was the
earliest discriminator of survival. Using univariate logistic regress
ion, lactate discriminated survivors from those who died at 13 and 24
h after admission, but not at 48 h (p = 0.019, 0.044 and 0.062, respec
tively). The area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) cu
rve for lactate was 0.81, 0.88 and 0.89 at 12, 24 and 45 h, respective
ly. At 12 h after admission, a blood lactate level > 3 mmol/l had a po
sitive predictive value for death of 56 % and a lactate level of 3 mmo
l/l or less had a positive predictive value for survival of 84 %. At 2
3 h a lactate level > 3 mmol/l had a positive predictive value for dea
th of 71 % and a level of 3 mmol/l or less had a positive predictive v
alue for survival of 86 %. No other variable identified non-survivors
from survivors at 12 h, Gastric tonometry could only be done on 19 of
the 31 children, of whom 8 died and 11 survived. In these 19 children,
DCO2 measured at 24 h, but not at 12 or 38 h, distinguished those who
died from those who survived (p = 0.045 and p = 0.20, respectively).
The area under the ROC curve for DCO2 measured at 24 h as a predictor
of survival was 0.71. Neither the absolute value of pHi nor the trend
of change in pHi at any time in the first 38 h identified survivors in
this series. The mean arterial pressure distinguished survivors from
non-survivors at 24 and 48 h (area under ROC curve = 0.80 and 0.78, re
spectively). The base deficit and heart rate did not identify non-surv
ivors from survivors at any time in the first 48 h. Conclusions: Blood
lactate level was the earliest predictor of outcome in children with
sepsis. In this group of patients, gastric tonometry added little to t
he clinical information that could be derived more simply by other mea
ns.