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Pediatric sepsis

Last updated: February 16, 2026

Summarytoggle arrow icon

Pediatric sepsis is an acute, life-threatening condition in which infection leads to organ dysfunction. Without prompt intervention, affected children frequently progress to septic shock and multiple organ failure. The precipitating infection is most commonly bacterial. Clinical features are often nonspecific and include fever, tachycardia, signs of organ dysfunction (e.g., reduced GCS, jaundice), and signs of shock. Diagnosis occurs alongside management and involves blood cultures, lactate, assessment for markers of infection and end-organ dysfunction, and investigation of the underlying etiology. Initial management focuses on the delivery of the hour-1 bundle for children, which combines definitive treatment (empiric antibiotic therapy) and resuscitation (intravenous fluids, vasoactive medications). Ongoing management includes nutritional support, tailored antibiotic therapy, and regular reassessment. Prevention of sepsis involves infection control measures and early recognition and management of severe infections. Screening for sepsis is recommended in all acutely unwell children.

For neonates, see "Neonatal bacterial infections."

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Definitionstoggle arrow icon

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Epidemiologytoggle arrow icon

  • Worldwide, half of sepsis cases occur in children ≤ 18 years of age.
    • ∼ 25 million cases (> 80% in children < 5 years of age)
    • ∼ 3 million deaths
  • Estimated prevalence in the US [3]
    • 2.25 per 1000 in those aged 1–12 months
    • 0.23–0.52 per 1000 in those aged between 1 and 19 years of age

Epidemiological data refers to the US, unless otherwise specified.

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Clinical featurestoggle arrow icon

In addition to features of the underlying primary infection (e.g., clinical features of pneumonia in children), the following nonspecific symptoms may be present. [1][7]

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Diagnosistoggle arrow icon

Approach [9]

Initial studies for sepsis in children [1]

Obtain blood cultures before administering antibiotics, unless doing so delays treatment. [9]

Further diagnostics to identify the source of infection [7]

Obtain additional studies (e.g., microbiology, imaging) based on the suspected source of sepsis in children, e.g.:

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Phoenix sepsis scoretoggle arrow icon

  • The Phoenix sepsis score is a pediatric organ dysfunction scoring system developed in 2024 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine. [2]
  • Points are based on dysfunction of the respiratory, cardiovascular, coagulation, and neurological systems. [2]
‎Phoenix sepsis score for pediatric sepsis [2]
‎Criteria Points
Respiratory (0–3 points)
Cardiovascular (0–6 points)
  • Vasoactive medications
    • 0 points: no medication
    • 1 point: one medication
    • 2 points: two or more medications
  • Lactate
    • 0 points: < 5 mmol/L
    • 1 point: 5–10.9 mmol/L
    • 2 points: ≥ 11 mmol/L
  • MAP by age-specific thresholds
    • 0: normal
    • 1: decreased
    • 2: significantly decreased
Coagulation (0–2 points)
Neurological (0–2 points)

The criteria for SIRS and severe sepsis are not used in children. [8]

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Managementtoggle arrow icon

Approach [1][9]

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Initial managementtoggle arrow icon

Hour-1 bundle for children with sepsis [1][9][10]

Administer antibiotics as soon as possible: within 1 hour in children with septic shock and within 3 hours in children without septic shock. [9]

Antibiotics and infection management

Empiric antibiotics for sepsis in children (unknown source) [9][11]
Patient characteristics Commonly used regimens
Community-acquired sepsis in previously healthy children
Immunocompromised or hospital-acquired sepsis

Fluid resuscitation for children with sepsis [9]

Discontinue IV fluids if signs and/or symptoms of fluid overload develop. [1]

Management of septic shock [1][9]

Additional supportive therapy [9]

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Ongoing managementtoggle arrow icon

There is no evidence to support using nutritional supplements (e.g., selenium, zinc, glutamine, arginine, ascorbic acid, vitamin D) to improve outcomes in children with sepsis.[9]

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Differential diagnosestoggle arrow icon

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Complicationstoggle arrow icon

  • Severe complicatiosn of sepsis include: [1][9]
  • Sequelae are seen in up to a third of survivors, including: [1]
    • Impaired baseline functional ability (e.g., sustained disability)
    • Recurrent severe infections

We list the most important complications. The selection is not exhaustive.

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Preventiontoggle arrow icon

Primary prevention

Screening for sepsis in children

  • Screening for sepsis is recommended in acutely unwell children. [9]
  • No specific tool is endorsed by guidelines; follow local protocols. [9][18]
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