- Enter the initial lactate (mmol/L) drawn at the start of resuscitation.
- Enter the repeat lactate (mmol/L) drawn after the resuscitation interval. The clearance percentage updates automatically.
- Optionally enter the time between samples (hours) to also see an informational per-hour clearance rate.
- A clearance ≥10% is adequate (green); 0–<10% is inadequate (amber); a negative value means lactate is rising (red) — ongoing hypoperfusion or shock.
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When to Use
Use lactate clearance in a patient being resuscitated for sepsis, septic shock, or any shock state with an elevated initial lactate. Draw a baseline lactate, resuscitate, then repeat the lactate after a defined interval (typically 2–6 hours) and calculate the percentage fall. An early clearance of ≥10% is associated with improved survival and serves as a validated resuscitation target — shown to be non-inferior to a central venous oxygen saturation (ScvO₂) goal in early sepsis therapy.
Appropriate population
Adults with an elevated initial lactate during resuscitation of sepsis or septic shock (and other shock states with documented hyperlactatemia). Most useful when a baseline and a timed repeat lactate are available so the trend can guide whether perfusion is improving.
When NOT to rely on it
Remember the non-hypoperfusion (type B) causes of hyperlactatemia — metformin, beta-agonists (e.g. nebulized salbutamol), liver failure, malignancy, thiamine deficiency — where lactate does not track perfusion and may clear slowly despite adequate resuscitation. Conversely, do not chase clearance with ever more fluid: over-resuscitation itself causes fluid-overload and venous congestion that can drive acute kidney injury. Interpret the number alongside the full clinical picture.
Pearls & Pitfalls
≥10% over the interval is the target
Lactate-guided resuscitation reduces mortality. An early clearance of ≥10% (measured over the resuscitation window, classically 2–6 hours) marks improving perfusion and is the validated goal. The repeat-sample timing matters: a 10% fall in 2 hours is more reassuring than the same fall over 12 hours, which is why the optional per-hour rate is informative.
Failure to clear predicts organ injury
Persistent hyperlactatemia and failure to clear lactate predict acute kidney injury, multiorgan failure, and death — a key feature of sepsis-associated AKI. A flat or rising lactate should prompt re-evaluation of the resuscitation strategy and a search for ongoing or uncontrolled sources of hypoperfusion or infection.
Pitfalls
(1) A negative clearance (rising lactate) is ominous — ongoing hypoperfusion or shock — not a calculation error. (2) Type B (non-hypoperfusion) lactate from metformin, beta-agonists, liver failure, or malignancy clears on its own timeline and can mislead. (3) Over-resuscitation with fluids to "clear" lactate causes fluid-overload AKI and venous congestion — chase perfusion, not a number. (4) Garbage in, garbage out: a tourniquet-bound, delayed, or mishandled sample falsely elevates lactate and distorts the trend.
Why Use It
A single lactate value is a snapshot; the trend is what tells you whether resuscitation is working. Lactate clearance converts two timed measurements into a defensible, quantitative marker of perfusion that has been shown in randomized and observational data to track survival in severe sepsis and septic shock — and to be a practical, bedside-friendly target that is non-inferior to invasive ScvO₂-guided goals. Because failure to clear lactate predicts AKI, multiorgan failure, and death, the calculation gives clinicians an early, actionable signal: keep resuscitating effectively, or step back and reassess the strategy before fluid overload itself harms the kidneys.
Lactate Clearance — Resuscitation Adequacy
Enter the initial and repeat lactate to get the clearance percentage. Optionally enter the time between samples to also see an informational per-hour clearance rate. A clearance ≥10% over the resuscitation interval is the validated, survival-associated target.
⚕ Lactate clearance % = ((initial − repeat) / initial) × 100. A clearance ≥10% over the resuscitation interval is associated with improved survival in sepsis and septic shock (Nguyen 2004; Jones 2010). Remember non-hypoperfusion (type B) causes of hyperlactatemia and the risk of fluid-overload AKI from over-resuscitation. For licensed clinicians; not a substitute for individualized assessment.
Next Steps
Use the clearance percentage to judge resuscitation adequacy and direct the next move.
- Clearance ≥10%: adequate, survival-associated trend. Continue the current strategy, recheck lactate at the next interval, and keep treating the source (antimicrobials, source control).
- Clearance 0–<10%: inadequate. Reassess perfusion and volume status, optimize the resuscitation, and consider non-hypoperfusion (type B) contributors before simply giving more fluid.
- Negative clearance (rising lactate): ominous — ongoing hypoperfusion or shock. Escalate: re-evaluate source control, vasopressor support, and the diagnosis; weigh the risk of fluid-overload AKI against the need for perfusion.
- Pair this with sepsis criteria — the qSOFA & SOFA score and SIRS / sepsis / septic shock definitions — to frame the overall trajectory.
Evidence & References
Formula
| Quantity | Formula |
|---|---|
| Lactate clearance (%) | ((initial − repeat) / initial) × 100 |
| Δ Lactate (mmol/L) | initial − repeat |
| Per-hour rate (informational) | clearance % ÷ hours between samples |
Interpretation of Clearance
| Clearance over the interval | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| ≥ 10% | Adequate clearance — associated with improved survival; validated resuscitation target |
| 0 – <10% | Inadequate clearance — reassess resuscitation and perfusion |
| < 0 (rising lactate) | Ominous — ongoing hypoperfusion / shock |
Early lactate clearance ≥10% is associated with improved outcome in severe sepsis and septic shock and was non-inferior to a central venous oxygen saturation (ScvO₂) goal as a target of early sepsis therapy. Persistent hyperlactatemia / failure to clear predicts AKI, multiorgan failure, and death.
References
- Nguyen HB, Rivers EP, Knoblich BP, et al. Early lactate clearance is associated with improved outcome in severe sepsis and septic shock. Crit Care Med. 2004;32(8):1637–1642.
- Jones AE, Shapiro NI, Trzeciak S, et al. Lactate clearance vs central venous oxygen saturation as goals of early sepsis therapy: a randomized clinical trial (LACTATE trial). JAMA. 2010;303(8):739–746.
- Evans L, Rhodes A, Alhazzani W, et al. Surviving Sepsis Campaign: International Guidelines for Management of Sepsis and Septic Shock 2021. Crit Care Med. 2021;49(11):e1063–e1143.
