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Surviving Sepsis Campaign international guidelines for the management of sepsis and septic shock in children 2026

Surviving Sepsis Campaign international guidelines for the management of sepsis and septic shock in children 2026
Surviving Sepsis Campaign international guidelines for the management of sepsis and septic shock in children 2026
Objective: to update evidence-based management recommendations for clinicians caring for children (including infants, school-aged children, and adolescents) with sepsis or septic shock.

Design: a panel of 68 international experts, representing 13 international organizations, as well as six methodologists, was convened. A formal conflict-of-interest policy was developed at the onset of the process and applied throughout. Teleconferences and electronic-based discussion among the chairs, co-chairs, methodologists, and subgroup leads, as well as within subgroups, served as an integral part of the guideline development process.

Methods: new priority topics and recommendations from the prior guideline iteration were used to identify Population, Intervention, Control, and Outcomes (PICO) questions likely to have new or updated evidence. We conducted a systematic review to identify the best available evidence, summarized the evidence, and then assessed the quality of evidence using the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation approach. We used the evidence-to-decision framework to formulate recommendations as strong or conditional, or as a good practice statement. “In our practice,” statements were included when evidence was inconclusive to issue a recommendation, but the panel felt that some guidance based on practice patterns may be appropriate.

Results: the panel provided 61 statements on the management of children with sepsis or septic shock. Overall, five were strong recommendations, 24 were conditional recommendations, and ten were good practice statements. For 22 PICO questions, no recommendations could be made, but for seven of these, “in our practice” statements were provided. Compared with the 2020 guidelines, 20 recommendations were new, 13 were updated for clarity and/or new evidence, six were reviewed but not changed, and 22 were carried forward based on consensus of the panel that new evidence was not available. Only three recommendations were based on high or moderate certainty of evidence.

Conclusions: updated management guidelines were issued by a panel of international experts for the best care of children with sepsis or septic shock, acknowledging that most aspects of care continue to have relatively low quality of evidence.
Evidence-based medicine, Guidelines, Infection, Pediatrics, Sepsis, Septic shock, Surviving Sepsis Campaign
0342-4642
Weiss, Scott L.
afb61431-ded4-4a69-9f7f-5d24e33baf03
Peters, Mark J.
a1db2568-cc2a-4672-8765-6340ee2d4972
Oczkowski, Simon J. W.
e7800a43-b09d-41c7-a65a-45822aedc28f
Faust, Saul N.
f97df780-9f9b-418e-b349-7adf63e150c1
et al
Weiss, Scott L.
afb61431-ded4-4a69-9f7f-5d24e33baf03
Peters, Mark J.
a1db2568-cc2a-4672-8765-6340ee2d4972
Oczkowski, Simon J. W.
e7800a43-b09d-41c7-a65a-45822aedc28f
Faust, Saul N.
f97df780-9f9b-418e-b349-7adf63e150c1

Weiss, Scott L., Peters, Mark J. and Oczkowski, Simon J. W. , et al (2026) Surviving Sepsis Campaign international guidelines for the management of sepsis and septic shock in children 2026. Intensive Care Medicine. (doi:10.1007/s00134-026-08360-2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to update evidence-based management recommendations for clinicians caring for children (including infants, school-aged children, and adolescents) with sepsis or septic shock.

Design: a panel of 68 international experts, representing 13 international organizations, as well as six methodologists, was convened. A formal conflict-of-interest policy was developed at the onset of the process and applied throughout. Teleconferences and electronic-based discussion among the chairs, co-chairs, methodologists, and subgroup leads, as well as within subgroups, served as an integral part of the guideline development process.

Methods: new priority topics and recommendations from the prior guideline iteration were used to identify Population, Intervention, Control, and Outcomes (PICO) questions likely to have new or updated evidence. We conducted a systematic review to identify the best available evidence, summarized the evidence, and then assessed the quality of evidence using the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation approach. We used the evidence-to-decision framework to formulate recommendations as strong or conditional, or as a good practice statement. “In our practice,” statements were included when evidence was inconclusive to issue a recommendation, but the panel felt that some guidance based on practice patterns may be appropriate.

Results: the panel provided 61 statements on the management of children with sepsis or septic shock. Overall, five were strong recommendations, 24 were conditional recommendations, and ten were good practice statements. For 22 PICO questions, no recommendations could be made, but for seven of these, “in our practice” statements were provided. Compared with the 2020 guidelines, 20 recommendations were new, 13 were updated for clarity and/or new evidence, six were reviewed but not changed, and 22 were carried forward based on consensus of the panel that new evidence was not available. Only three recommendations were based on high or moderate certainty of evidence.

Conclusions: updated management guidelines were issued by a panel of international experts for the best care of children with sepsis or septic shock, acknowledging that most aspects of care continue to have relatively low quality of evidence.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 23 March 2026
Keywords: Evidence-based medicine, Guidelines, Infection, Pediatrics, Sepsis, Septic shock, Surviving Sepsis Campaign

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 511556
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511556
ISSN: 0342-4642
PURE UUID: 3c36eacf-f5c1-4835-b70b-729526d04241
ORCID for Saul N. Faust: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3410-7642

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Date deposited: 20 May 2026 16:53
Last modified: 21 May 2026 01:40

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Contributors

Author: Scott L. Weiss
Author: Mark J. Peters
Author: Simon J. W. Oczkowski
Author: Saul N. Faust ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al

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