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Review
. 2025 Aug;21(8):565-575.
doi: 10.1038/s41581-025-00973-y. Epub 2025 Jun 12.

Sepsis criteria and kidney function: eliminating sex, age and economic status biases

Affiliations
Review

Sepsis criteria and kidney function: eliminating sex, age and economic status biases

Ayse Akcan Arikan et al. Nat Rev Nephrol. 2025 Aug.

Abstract

The kidney is a target organ for the dysregulated host response to infection that defines sepsis, and acute kidney injury (AKI) is often an early manifestation of this response. Current sepsis criteria for adults (Sepsis-3) continue to include outmoded measures of kidney health, such as absolute creatinine values, which are used in organ failure scoring independently of baseline kidney function or treatment with dialysis. This approach perpetuates disparities, as older female patients require much larger decreases in kidney function compared with young male patients to achieve the same 'renal domain' points, exacerbating sex- and age-based inequities in health assessment and response. Furthermore, the latest data-driven machine learning-assisted paediatric sepsis criteria (the Phoenix Sepsis Score) have excluded kidney function entirely from sepsis diagnosis. Consequently, these criteria will exclude a child with pneumonia and associated AKI, even if receiving dialysis, from a sepsis diagnosis unless other organs fail. This inconsistency, given the extensive refinement and validation of AKI diagnostic criteria over the past three decades, is unacceptable. Current criteria for diagnosis of sepsis in both adults and children fail to incorporate crucial advances in the diagnosis of kidney disease. We maintain that it is imperative that kidney injury is quantified accurately in sepsis scoring systems free of sex, race and other biases.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests: A.A.A has received institutional research funding from Bioporto, Medtronic and Baxter and serves on the scientific advisory boards of SeaStar Medical, CSLVifor and Mallinckrodt. M.O. has received institutional research funding from BioMérieux and Baxter. S.L.G. discloses consulting fees from Baxter, Mozarc Medical, NuWellis, BioPorto, SeaStar Medical, Novartis, Talphera, Silver Creek, Calcimedica, Fresenius and Otsuka, has received grant support from BioPorto, SeaStar Medical, ExThera, Talphera, Mozarc Medical and Baxter and has equity interest in MediBeacon. J.A.K. has received consulting fees from BioMérieux, AstraZeneca, Bayer, Novartis, Mitsubishi Tenabe and Chugai Pharma, and is Chief Medical Officer of and holds stock with Spectral Medical.

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