Clinical criteria for the definition of refractory septic shock: a joint Delphi consensus from the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) and European Society of Intensive Care Medicine (ESICM)
Clinical criteria for the definition of refractory septic shock: a joint Delphi consensus from the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) and European Society of Intensive Care Medicine (ESICM)
Objective: a definition of refractory septic shock is necessary to guide diagnosis, management, prognostication, research, and future guidelines for this most severe form of the disease. We sought to achieve consensus on clinical criteria that would be used to define refractory septic shock.
Design: review of literature, expert panel position statements, and Delphi rounds with an international expert group.
Setting: consensus was defined as having at least 75% of panellists in agreement or disagreement on the three highest or lowest levels of a 7-point Likert scale or based on responses to single- or multiple-choice questions, respectively.
Subjects: a panel of multinational, multiprofessional, and multidisciplinary critical care experts assembled by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine (57 invitations and 56 participants).
Measurements and main results: a five-round Delphi process was conducted for consensus and stability. The steering committee proposed 34 statements, and five of them were rejected by panel experts after round 2. Among 29 statements selected from eight domains, consensus was reached for 13. The panel agreed on the need for a comprehensive consensus set of clinical criteria for refractory septic shock. Markers of organ dysfunction (75%, 2 rounds), tissue perfusion (91.1%, 2 rounds) including lactate (94.6%, 2 rounds) and capillary refill time (76.8%, 2 rounds), assessment of fluid responsiveness after initial resuscitation (92.9%, 5 rounds), and use of vasoactive drugs at norepinephrine equivalents greater than 0.5 µg/kg/min (75.0%, 3 rounds) were selected as clinical criteria of refractory septic shock. The use of critical care ultrasound (CCUS) (92.9%, 3 rounds) was the single diagnostic modality that reached a consensus-based agreement.
Conclusions: a consensus for 13 criteria to frame the definition of refractory septic shock was reached. Refractory septic shock is characterised by persistently elevated lactate concentrations and or prolonged capillary refill time in patients with septic shock who are fluid unresponsive, require a norepinephrine base equivalent dose greater than 0.5 µg per kilogram per minute, and undergo CCUS assessment when mixed shock is suspected.
Concept, Criteria, Definition, Refractory, Sepsis, Septic shock
Leone, Marc
5c08401f-17c2-4f8f-a0c3-7179fcf22de3
Myatra, Sheila
ebb50c63-bd9d-4da0-b8f4-847b979ba567
Dugar, Siddharth
d9423e4e-5620-446d-95b6-753a130762db
Mckenzie, Cathrine
13ad9cca-fa4f-451b-a3f4-5c83d1ef3b8c
24 March 2026
Leone, Marc
5c08401f-17c2-4f8f-a0c3-7179fcf22de3
Myatra, Sheila
ebb50c63-bd9d-4da0-b8f4-847b979ba567
Dugar, Siddharth
d9423e4e-5620-446d-95b6-753a130762db
Mckenzie, Cathrine
13ad9cca-fa4f-451b-a3f4-5c83d1ef3b8c
Leone, Marc, Myatra, Sheila and Dugar, Siddharth
,
et al.
(2026)
Clinical criteria for the definition of refractory septic shock: a joint Delphi consensus from the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) and European Society of Intensive Care Medicine (ESICM).
Intensive Care Medicine.
(doi:10.1007/s00134-026-08344-2).
Abstract
Objective: a definition of refractory septic shock is necessary to guide diagnosis, management, prognostication, research, and future guidelines for this most severe form of the disease. We sought to achieve consensus on clinical criteria that would be used to define refractory septic shock.
Design: review of literature, expert panel position statements, and Delphi rounds with an international expert group.
Setting: consensus was defined as having at least 75% of panellists in agreement or disagreement on the three highest or lowest levels of a 7-point Likert scale or based on responses to single- or multiple-choice questions, respectively.
Subjects: a panel of multinational, multiprofessional, and multidisciplinary critical care experts assembled by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine (57 invitations and 56 participants).
Measurements and main results: a five-round Delphi process was conducted for consensus and stability. The steering committee proposed 34 statements, and five of them were rejected by panel experts after round 2. Among 29 statements selected from eight domains, consensus was reached for 13. The panel agreed on the need for a comprehensive consensus set of clinical criteria for refractory septic shock. Markers of organ dysfunction (75%, 2 rounds), tissue perfusion (91.1%, 2 rounds) including lactate (94.6%, 2 rounds) and capillary refill time (76.8%, 2 rounds), assessment of fluid responsiveness after initial resuscitation (92.9%, 5 rounds), and use of vasoactive drugs at norepinephrine equivalents greater than 0.5 µg/kg/min (75.0%, 3 rounds) were selected as clinical criteria of refractory septic shock. The use of critical care ultrasound (CCUS) (92.9%, 3 rounds) was the single diagnostic modality that reached a consensus-based agreement.
Conclusions: a consensus for 13 criteria to frame the definition of refractory septic shock was reached. Refractory septic shock is characterised by persistently elevated lactate concentrations and or prolonged capillary refill time in patients with septic shock who are fluid unresponsive, require a norepinephrine base equivalent dose greater than 0.5 µg per kilogram per minute, and undergo CCUS assessment when mixed shock is suspected.
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Accepted/In Press date: 10 February 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 March 2026
Published date: 24 March 2026
Keywords:
Concept, Criteria, Definition, Refractory, Sepsis, Septic shock
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Local EPrints ID: 511743
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511743
ISSN: 0342-4642
PURE UUID: 8e5c74e7-6881-4986-b15f-d244f66a69c2
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Date deposited: 01 Jun 2026 16:30
Last modified: 02 Jun 2026 02:14
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Author:
Marc Leone
Author:
Sheila Myatra
Author:
Siddharth Dugar
Author:
Cathrine Mckenzie
Corporate Author: et al.
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