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. 2018 Sep 15;15(9):2017. doi: 10.3390/ijerph15092017

Table 2.

Additional studies that did not meet full inclusion criteria but examined components of early sepsis management included in the review.

Study Design Bias Country Participants Population Study Summary
Reddy, 2010 [25] Systematic review African continent 58,296
(adults and children)
Patients with ≥1 blood culture Reports bacterial pathogens isolated from blood cultures: S. enterica, S. pneumoniae, S. aureus and E. Coli. Mycobacterium tuberculosis frequently isolated (166/539) where appropriate techniques used.
Moore, 2017 [26] Systematic review Sub-Saharan Africa 5573 Adults admitted to hospital Pooled data from 13 cohort studies to derive a ‘universal vital assessment’ score to predict in-hospital mortality based on physiological parameters. Clinical variables include: temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate, systolic blood pressure (BP), SpO2, Glasgow coma scale (GCS) and HIV-infection status. Score AUCROC for mortality 0.77 (0.75–0.79).
Gupta-Wright, 2018 [27] RCT 5/5 Malawi and South Africa 4788 Adult inpatients with HIV-infection Urinary lipoarabinomannan guided therapy did not reduce overall mortality (adjusted risk reduction [aRD]—2.8%, CI—5.8 to 0.3; p = 0.074) but did reduce mortality in pre-defined subgroups with CD4 count <100, severe anaemia and clinically suspected tuberculosis (TB).
Peter, 2016 [28] RCT 4/5 Sub-Saharan Africa 2659 Adult admissions with HIV-infection and TB symptoms Urinary lipoarabinomannan guided anti-tuberculosis treatment reduced initiation time (median 0 day [IQR 0–2] vs. 1 day [IQR 0–3), p < 0.0001) and eight-week mortality (21% vs. 25%, ARR 4% C.I. 1–7%).
Jacob, 2009 [29] Prospective Observational 6/9 Uganda 382 A & E with severe sepsis [23] Management and outcomes of patients with severe sepsis: including poor fluid resuscitation (median 500 mL within 6 h) and antibiotic administration (61% patients received within 6 h) following sepsis diagnosis. Thirty-day mortality 43.0%.
Belle, 2010 [30] Cross-sectional 6/9 Multiple (African continent) 231 hospitals and health centres Healthcare facilities Snapshot survey assessed oxygen supply and infrastructure in 12 African countries. Only 43·8% of facilities had uninterrupted access to an oxygen source and 24·6% had a fully functioning oxygen concentrator. Electricity fully available at 35·1% of facilities

Risk of bias assessments: Newcastle–Ottowa scale and Jadad scale for cohort studies and randomised controlled trials, respectively. AUCROC: Area Under Receiver Operator Curve; ARR: Absolute risk reduction.