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New Phoenix criteria for pediatric sepsis and septic shock: the strengths and the future of a comprehensive perspective

In Greek mythology, the phoenix bird symbolizes life that overcomes death and the strength that accompanies transformation. Therefore, Phoenix is an appropriate name for the new Pediatric Sepsis Score owing to both the mythological reference and the location where it was first presented (Society of Critical Care Medicine – SCCM - Conference in Phoenix, Arizona).(11. Schlapbach LJ, Watson RS, Sorce LR, Argent AC, Menon K, Hall MW, Akech S, Albers DJ, Alpern ER, Balamuth F, Bembea M, Biban P, Carrol ED, Chiotos K, Chisti MJ, DeWitt PE, Evans I, Flauzino de Oliveira C, Horvat CM, Inwald D, Ishimine P, Jaramillo-Bustamante JC, Levin M, Lodha R, Martin B, Nadel S, Nakagawa S, Peters MJ, Randolph AG, Ranjit S, Rebull MN, Russell S, Scott HF, de Souza DC, Tissieres P, Weiss SL, Wiens MO, Wynn JL, Kissoon N, Zimmerman JJ, Sanchez-Pinto LN, Bennett TD; Society of Critical Care Medicine Pediatric Sepsis Definition Task Force. International Consensus Criteria for Pediatric Sepsis and Septic Shock. JAMA. 2024;331(8):665-74.)The Phoenix Pediatric Sepsis (PPS) criteria for sepsis and septic shock are intended to identify children (1 month to <18 years) with life-threatening organ dysfunction due to infection, and the score was developed based on more than three million pediatric electronic health encounters,(22. Sanchez-Pinto LN, Bennett TD, DeWitt PE, Russell S, Rebull MN, Martin B, Akech S, Albers DJ, Alpern ER, Balamuth F, Bembea M, Chisti MJ, Evans I, Horvat CM, Jaramillo-Bustamante JC, Kissoon N, Menon K, Scott HF, Weiss SL, Wiens MO, Zimmerman JJ, Argent AC, Sorce LR, Schlapbach LJ, Watson RS; Society of Critical Care Medicine Pediatric Sepsis Definition Task Force; Biban P, Carrol E, Chiotos K, Flauzino De Oliveira C, Hall MW, Inwald D, Ishimine P, Levin M, Lodha R, Nadel S, Nakagawa S, Peters MJ, Randolph AG, Ranjit S, Souza DC, Tissieres P, Wynn JL. Development and validation of the Phoenix criteria for pediatric sepsis and septic shock. JAMA. 2024;331(8):675-86.)which is a remarkable achievement considering pediatric and adult sepsis studies. The previous pediatric sepsis criteria were published in 2005 by the International Pediatric Sepsis Consensus Conference (IPSCC), and sepsis was defined as a suspected or confirmed infection in the presence of systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) (Figure 1).(33. Goldstein B, Giroir B, Randolph A; International Consensus Conference on Pediatric Sepsis. International pediatric sepsis consensus conference: definitions for sepsis and organ dysfunction in pediatrics. Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2005;6(1):2-8.)Although these criteria are broadly used in daily practice, limitations to this definition have been identified since its inception.(44. Carrol ED, Ranjit S, Menon K, Bennett TD, Sanchez-Pinto LN, Zimmerman JJ, Souza DC, Sorce LR, Randolph AG, Ishimine P, Flauzino de Oliveira C, Lodha R, Harmon L, Watson RS, Schlapbach LJ, Kissoon N, Argent AC; Society of Critical Care Medicine's Pediatric Sepsis Definition Taskforce. Operationalizing appropriate sepsis definitions in children worldwide: considerations for the Pediatric Sepsis Definition Taskforce. Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2023;24(6):e263-71.)Specific limitations of concern include a lack of consideration of a global context, leading to challenges in the applicabiblity of these criteria in limited-resource settings where the highest sepsis burden lies; variability in application at the bedside, which leads to delay in patient diagnosis; and the inability to identify the patients at greatest risk of poor outcomes.(55. Menon K, Schlapbach LJ, Akech S, Argent A, Biban P, Carrol ED, Chiotos K, Jobayer Chisti M, Evans IVR, Inwald DP, Ishimine P, Kissoon N, Lodha R, Nadel S, Oliveira CF, Peters M, Sadeghirad B, Scott HF, de Souza DC, Tissieres P, Watson RS, Wiens MO, Wynn JL, Zimmerman JJ, Sorce LR; Pediatric Sepsis Definition Taskforce of the Society of Critical Care Medicine. Criteria for pediatric sepsis-a systematic review and meta-analysis by the Pediatric Sepsis Definition Taskforce. Crit Care Med. 2022;50(1):21-36.)

Figure 1
Comparison of the International Pediatric Sepsis Consensus Conference criteria with the Phoenix Pediatric Sepsis criteria in terms of objectives, definitions, criteria, classification and methodology.

* International survey, systematic review/meta-analysis and a cohort study; † The International Pediatric Sepsis Consensus Conference Criteria definition of cardiovascular organ dysfunction is as follows: 40mL/kg or more isotonic fluid in 1 hour, hypotension or a need for vasoactive fluid or at least 2 of the following: unexplained metabolic acidosis, arterial lactate > 2 times the upper limit of normal, oliguria, a prolonged capillary refill time, or a core-to-peripheral temperature gap; ‡ The Phoenix definition of cardiovascular organ dysfunction includes severe hypotension for age, a venous or arterial blood lactate value of more than 5mmol/L (> 45.05mg/dL), or a need for vasoactive medication.

SIRS - systemic inflammatory response syndrome.


These IPSCC limitations have stimulated the search for other definitions. In 2016, adult practitioners chose a definition based on life-threatening organ dysfunction rather than the SIRS criteria.(66. Singer M, Deutschman CS, Seymour CW, Shankar-Hari M, Annane D, Bauer M, et al. The Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis and Septic Shock (Sepsis-3). JAMA. 2016;315(8):801-10.)The Sepsis-3 Task Force analyzed data from nearly 150,000 adult patients in two high-income countries and concluded that sepsis should be defined by the presence of life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infections and identified sepsis using an increase in the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score of at least 2 points in patients with suspected infection. These criteria, however, were not developed with pediatric data and have not been validated in children; therefore, they were not extrapolatable or adapted for children.

New criteria for defining pediatric sepsis have been eagerly awaited for years, and a task force led by the SCCM, comprising 35 experts from six continents, has worked diligently since 2019 to finalize these criteria. Published in January 2024, the Phoenix Sepsis Score (PSS) criteria were developed through 3 distinct methodologies that progressively built on and dove-tailed together. Data from a global survey about sepsis definition perceptions of 2,835 clinicians(77. Morin L, Hall M, de Souza D, Guoping L, Jabornisky R, Shime N, Ranjit S, Gilholm P, Nakagawa S, Zimmerman JJ, Sorce LR, Argent A, Kissoon N, Tissières P, Watson RS, Schlapbach LJ; Pediatric Sepsis Definition Taskforce. The Current and Future State of Pediatric Sepsis Definitions: An International Survey. Pediatrics. 2022;149(6):e2021052565.) and a systematic review and meta-analysis(55. Menon K, Schlapbach LJ, Akech S, Argent A, Biban P, Carrol ED, Chiotos K, Jobayer Chisti M, Evans IVR, Inwald DP, Ishimine P, Kissoon N, Lodha R, Nadel S, Oliveira CF, Peters M, Sadeghirad B, Scott HF, de Souza DC, Tissieres P, Watson RS, Wiens MO, Wynn JL, Zimmerman JJ, Sorce LR; Pediatric Sepsis Definition Taskforce of the Society of Critical Care Medicine. Criteria for pediatric sepsis-a systematic review and meta-analysis by the Pediatric Sepsis Definition Taskforce. Crit Care Med. 2022;50(1):21-36.) helped guide the design of the last step. Finally, a data-driven derivation and validation study was conducted as a multicenter retrospective cohort study(22. Sanchez-Pinto LN, Bennett TD, DeWitt PE, Russell S, Rebull MN, Martin B, Akech S, Albers DJ, Alpern ER, Balamuth F, Bembea M, Chisti MJ, Evans I, Horvat CM, Jaramillo-Bustamante JC, Kissoon N, Menon K, Scott HF, Weiss SL, Wiens MO, Zimmerman JJ, Argent AC, Sorce LR, Schlapbach LJ, Watson RS; Society of Critical Care Medicine Pediatric Sepsis Definition Task Force; Biban P, Carrol E, Chiotos K, Flauzino De Oliveira C, Hall MW, Inwald D, Ishimine P, Levin M, Lodha R, Nadel S, Nakagawa S, Peters MJ, Randolph AG, Ranjit S, Souza DC, Tissieres P, Wynn JL. Development and validation of the Phoenix criteria for pediatric sepsis and septic shock. JAMA. 2024;331(8):675-86.) and concluded with a modified Delphi consensus process where all members of the task force reviewed, discussed, and voted upon the criteria. The dataset is to be commended for its robustness, as it included 172,984 pediatric encounters from 10 health systems in both high-income countries (HICs) and low-middle income countries (LMICs).(22. Sanchez-Pinto LN, Bennett TD, DeWitt PE, Russell S, Rebull MN, Martin B, Akech S, Albers DJ, Alpern ER, Balamuth F, Bembea M, Chisti MJ, Evans I, Horvat CM, Jaramillo-Bustamante JC, Kissoon N, Menon K, Scott HF, Weiss SL, Wiens MO, Zimmerman JJ, Argent AC, Sorce LR, Schlapbach LJ, Watson RS; Society of Critical Care Medicine Pediatric Sepsis Definition Task Force; Biban P, Carrol E, Chiotos K, Flauzino De Oliveira C, Hall MW, Inwald D, Ishimine P, Levin M, Lodha R, Nadel S, Nakagawa S, Peters MJ, Randolph AG, Ranjit S, Souza DC, Tissieres P, Wynn JL. Development and validation of the Phoenix criteria for pediatric sepsis and septic shock. JAMA. 2024;331(8):675-86.)

The final conceptual new definition for pediatric sepsis is “an infection with life-threatening organ dysfunction”, which includes a four-organ system model—the PSS—with respiratory, cardiovascular, coagulation, and neurological variables. Sepsis is identified by a PSS of at least 2 points in children with suspected infection, and septic shock is defined as children with sepsis with at least 1 cardiovascular point in PSS. The variables used, such as PaO2/FiO2 or SpO2/FiO2 for respiratory dysfunction, the Glasgow Coma Scale score for neurologic dysfunction and the use of amines for cardiovascular dysfunction, are indubitable. The authors, however, note that the PSS includes lower mean arterial pressure cutoff values than most currently used pediatric blood pressure values,(88. Haque IU, Zaritsky AL. Analysis of the evidence for the lower limit of systolic and mean arterial pressure in children. Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2007;8(2):138-44.,99. Flynn JT, Kaelber DC, Baker-Smith CM, Blowey D, Carroll AE, Daniels SR, de Ferranti SD, Dionne JM, Falkner B, Flinn SK, Gidding SS, Goodwin C, Leu MG, Powers ME, Rea C, Samuels J, Simasek M, Thaker VV, Urbina EM; Subcommittee on Screening and Management of High Blood Pressure in Children. Clinical Practice Guideline for Screening and Management of High Blood Pressure in Children and Adolescents. Pediatrics. 2017;140(3):e20171904.) which is surprising because of the possibility of not scoring this parameter for borderline hypotensive children. Additionally, the PSS does not include the capillary refill time, a universally available physical examination finding, in the criteria. Prolonged capillary refill time reflects damage to the microcirculation(1010. Fernández-Sarmiento J, Lamprea S, Barrera S, Acevedo L, Duque C, Trujillo M, et al. The association between prolonged capillary refill time and microcirculation changes in children with sepsis. BMC Pediatr. 2024;24(1):68.) and is a surrogate for laboratory values such as lactate, which may not be available in many limited-resource settings. Future prospective studies must evaluate the exclusion of this important physical finding and its impact on septic patient identification and outcomes.

However, we do note that since these findings were derived and validated using data from high- and limited-resource settings, the new criteria should improve the diagnosis of pediatric sepsis and septic shock globally compared to the existing IPSCC criteria. The PSS criteria should have a greater positive predictive value and a similar or better sensitivity for identifying life-threatening organ dysfunction. These improvements are also essential for enriching clinical trial entry criteria, antibiotic stewardship, and more reliable global data on sepsis-related mortality.

Nineteen years after the historic creation of the IPSCC criteria, a new task force for pediatric sepsis definitions identified both the gaps in the original criteria and a potential solution. This bold effort must be commended, and the rest of the community must critically evaluate the Phoenix criteria on several levels. The Phoenix criteria outperformed the IPSCC criteria, which has been the sole pediatric sepsis definition to date. However, despite incorporating data from both HICs and LMICs for development and validation, the external validity of the PSS will be confirmed only once validated screening tools are studied and developed. Regrettably, there are few studies on sepsis screening tools in both HIC and LMIC settings, hindering the selection of a single tool or the determination of criteria to identify patients at risk for sepsis.(1111. Sepanski RJ, Godambe SA, Mangum CD, Bovat CS, Zaritsky AL, Shah SH. Designing a pediatric severe sepsis screening tool. Front Pediatr. 2014;2:56.,1212. Mawji A, Li E, Komugisha C, Akech S, Dunsmuir D, Wiens MO, et al. Smart triage: triage and management of sepsis in children using the point-of-care Pediatric Rapid Sepsis Trigger (PRST) tool. BMC Health Serv Res. 2020;20(1):493.)The 2020 guidelines from the Pediatric Surviving Sepsis Campaign advocate for health care institutions to adapt systematic screening for acutely unwell children, aiming to more promptly identify septic shock and other sepsis-related organ dysfunctions.(1313. Weiss SL, Peters MJ, Alhazzani W, Agus MS, Flori HR, Inwald DP, et al. Surviving Sepsis Campaign International Guidelines for the Management of Septic Shock and Sepsis-Associated Organ Dysfunction in Children. Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2020;21(2):e52-106.)Thus, establishing the fundamental requirements for a sepsis screening tool that ensures consistency in the variables used across multiple settings and institutions is an essential next step. The prerequisites can then be tailored to the specificities of each scenario (e.g., electronic vs. nonelectronic; frequency of re-evaluation; parental concerns, health-care provider intuition). Once sepsis screening tools meeting established prerequisites are available, assessing the external validity and performance of the PSS will be feasible. However, the lack of uniformity among screening tools poses challenges in this assessment.

What comes next? First, the PSS must be further validated globally and prospectively in various resource settings and among a broad range of patients ranging from previously healthy children to those with malnutrition or chronic illness. Second, the new score must be adapted by medical systems that create and implement high-quality screening tools with the new Phoenix criteria to allow early identification of sepsis patients at the institutional level, and front-line providers/researchers must adopt this future method of sepsis diagnosis. Third, a follow-up survey should be conducted broadly to identify the benefits, limitations, and challenges of using the new criteria. Fourth, and most importantly, will the Phoenix criteria improve patient outcomes? This new conceptual framework has simplified the diagnosis to rapidly identify life-threatening organ dysfunction due to infection, but this simplicity should not limit the diagnosis or delay treatment of patients with early sepsis or less severe infection. The success of this paradigm shift in caring for pediatric sepsis patients in the critical care community will lie in continued validation of the criteria, in creating systematic changes for standardized diagnosis, in identifying limitations and challenges, and, finally, in demonstrating improvements in patient outcomes.

REFERENCES

  • 1
    Schlapbach LJ, Watson RS, Sorce LR, Argent AC, Menon K, Hall MW, Akech S, Albers DJ, Alpern ER, Balamuth F, Bembea M, Biban P, Carrol ED, Chiotos K, Chisti MJ, DeWitt PE, Evans I, Flauzino de Oliveira C, Horvat CM, Inwald D, Ishimine P, Jaramillo-Bustamante JC, Levin M, Lodha R, Martin B, Nadel S, Nakagawa S, Peters MJ, Randolph AG, Ranjit S, Rebull MN, Russell S, Scott HF, de Souza DC, Tissieres P, Weiss SL, Wiens MO, Wynn JL, Kissoon N, Zimmerman JJ, Sanchez-Pinto LN, Bennett TD; Society of Critical Care Medicine Pediatric Sepsis Definition Task Force. International Consensus Criteria for Pediatric Sepsis and Septic Shock. JAMA. 2024;331(8):665-74.
  • 2
    Sanchez-Pinto LN, Bennett TD, DeWitt PE, Russell S, Rebull MN, Martin B, Akech S, Albers DJ, Alpern ER, Balamuth F, Bembea M, Chisti MJ, Evans I, Horvat CM, Jaramillo-Bustamante JC, Kissoon N, Menon K, Scott HF, Weiss SL, Wiens MO, Zimmerman JJ, Argent AC, Sorce LR, Schlapbach LJ, Watson RS; Society of Critical Care Medicine Pediatric Sepsis Definition Task Force; Biban P, Carrol E, Chiotos K, Flauzino De Oliveira C, Hall MW, Inwald D, Ishimine P, Levin M, Lodha R, Nadel S, Nakagawa S, Peters MJ, Randolph AG, Ranjit S, Souza DC, Tissieres P, Wynn JL. Development and validation of the Phoenix criteria for pediatric sepsis and septic shock. JAMA. 2024;331(8):675-86.
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  • 4
    Carrol ED, Ranjit S, Menon K, Bennett TD, Sanchez-Pinto LN, Zimmerman JJ, Souza DC, Sorce LR, Randolph AG, Ishimine P, Flauzino de Oliveira C, Lodha R, Harmon L, Watson RS, Schlapbach LJ, Kissoon N, Argent AC; Society of Critical Care Medicine's Pediatric Sepsis Definition Taskforce. Operationalizing appropriate sepsis definitions in children worldwide: considerations for the Pediatric Sepsis Definition Taskforce. Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2023;24(6):e263-71.
  • 5
    Menon K, Schlapbach LJ, Akech S, Argent A, Biban P, Carrol ED, Chiotos K, Jobayer Chisti M, Evans IVR, Inwald DP, Ishimine P, Kissoon N, Lodha R, Nadel S, Oliveira CF, Peters M, Sadeghirad B, Scott HF, de Souza DC, Tissieres P, Watson RS, Wiens MO, Wynn JL, Zimmerman JJ, Sorce LR; Pediatric Sepsis Definition Taskforce of the Society of Critical Care Medicine. Criteria for pediatric sepsis-a systematic review and meta-analysis by the Pediatric Sepsis Definition Taskforce. Crit Care Med. 2022;50(1):21-36.
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    Singer M, Deutschman CS, Seymour CW, Shankar-Hari M, Annane D, Bauer M, et al. The Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis and Septic Shock (Sepsis-3). JAMA. 2016;315(8):801-10.
  • 7
    Morin L, Hall M, de Souza D, Guoping L, Jabornisky R, Shime N, Ranjit S, Gilholm P, Nakagawa S, Zimmerman JJ, Sorce LR, Argent A, Kissoon N, Tissières P, Watson RS, Schlapbach LJ; Pediatric Sepsis Definition Taskforce. The Current and Future State of Pediatric Sepsis Definitions: An International Survey. Pediatrics. 2022;149(6):e2021052565.
  • 8
    Haque IU, Zaritsky AL. Analysis of the evidence for the lower limit of systolic and mean arterial pressure in children. Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2007;8(2):138-44.
  • 9
    Flynn JT, Kaelber DC, Baker-Smith CM, Blowey D, Carroll AE, Daniels SR, de Ferranti SD, Dionne JM, Falkner B, Flinn SK, Gidding SS, Goodwin C, Leu MG, Powers ME, Rea C, Samuels J, Simasek M, Thaker VV, Urbina EM; Subcommittee on Screening and Management of High Blood Pressure in Children. Clinical Practice Guideline for Screening and Management of High Blood Pressure in Children and Adolescents. Pediatrics. 2017;140(3):e20171904.
  • 10
    Fernández-Sarmiento J, Lamprea S, Barrera S, Acevedo L, Duque C, Trujillo M, et al. The association between prolonged capillary refill time and microcirculation changes in children with sepsis. BMC Pediatr. 2024;24(1):68.
  • 11
    Sepanski RJ, Godambe SA, Mangum CD, Bovat CS, Zaritsky AL, Shah SH. Designing a pediatric severe sepsis screening tool. Front Pediatr. 2014;2:56.
  • 12
    Mawji A, Li E, Komugisha C, Akech S, Dunsmuir D, Wiens MO, et al. Smart triage: triage and management of sepsis in children using the point-of-care Pediatric Rapid Sepsis Trigger (PRST) tool. BMC Health Serv Res. 2020;20(1):493.
  • 13
    Weiss SL, Peters MJ, Alhazzani W, Agus MS, Flori HR, Inwald DP, et al. Surviving Sepsis Campaign International Guidelines for the Management of Septic Shock and Sepsis-Associated Organ Dysfunction in Children. Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2020;21(2):e52-106.

Edited by

Responsible editor: Daniela Carla de Souza - https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1968-6773.

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    19 July 2024
  • Date of issue
    2024

History

  • Received
    19 Feb 2024
  • Accepted
    2 Apr 2024
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