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Title: Diagnostik und Therapie der Beatmungspneumonien


1
Diagnostik und Therapie der Beatmungspneumonien
M. Raffenberg, H. Lode Zentralklinik Emil von
Behring, Berlin-Zehlendorf Lungenfachklinik
Heckeshorn akadem. Lehrkrankenhaus der FU Berlin
2
Epidemiologie der Beatmungspneumonie
  • Inzidenz 7 - 20 bzw. 5-34/1000 Tage
  • VAP-Rate 1-3 pro Beatmungstag
  • ICU-Therapie 6d - 13d
  • Beatmung 10d - 23d
  • Letalität 20 - 50

Craven DE, Steger KA. Epidemiology of nosocomial
pneumonia. Chest 19951081S-16S Fagon JY et al.
Nosocomial pneumonia and mortality among pts in
ICU. JAMA 1996275866-9 Cook DJ et al. Incid. of
and risk factors for VAP in critically ill pts.
Ann Intern Med 1998129433-40 Fagon JY et. al.
Nosocomial Pneumonia. in Schoemaker. Crit Care
Med. 4th Ed. 2000 1572-98
3
(No Transcript)
4
The Mechanically Ventilated Patient
enteralnutrition stomach, bowel air
  • environmentother patients
  • nursing stuff
  • endogenous flora
  • distant focusof infection
  • blood

catheter, tube oropharyngealflora microaspiration
lower respiratory tract pneumonia
directcontact
mod. Francoli. CMI 1997 3(1)
5
Supine Body Position as a Risk Factor for
Nosocomial Pneumonia in Mechanically Ventilated
PatientsA Randomized Trial (I)
  • Background Can the incidence of nosocomial
    pneumonia
  • be reduced by a semirecumbent body position
  • in ICU-patients?
  • Design Prospective randomized study in 130
    patients
  • at 2 ICU in Hospital Clinic Barcelona.
  • Methods Analysis of clinically suspected and
    micro-
  • biologically confirmed nosocomial pneumonia
  • (clinical quantitative bacteriological
    criteria).

Drakulovic MB, Torres A et al. Lancet 1999
3541851-58
6
Supine Position in Mechanically Ventilated
Patients (II)
  • Results Clinic. suspected nosocomial
    pneumonia
  • - semirecumbent
    group 3/39 (8)
  • - supine group 16/47
    (34) p 0.003
  • Microbiologically
    confirmed pneumonia
  • - semirecumbent group
    2/39 (5)
  • - supine group 11/47
    (23) p 0.018
  • Highest risk Supine body
    position plus enteral
  • nutrition 14/28 (50)
  • Conclusions Semirecumbent body position reduces
  • frequency and risk of nosocomial pneumonia
  • especially in patients who receive enteral
  • nutrition.

Drakulovic MB, Torres A et al. Lancet 1999
3541851
7
Infektionsraten bei nicht invasiver Beatmung
Pneumonie

Ergebnisse randomisierter kontrollierter Studien

Brochard 1995 n43/42
Kramer 1995 n16/15
Antonelli 1998 n32/32
Wood 1998 n16/11
Confalonieri 1999 n28/28
Antonelli 2000 n20/20
Nava 1998 n25/25
8
Ventilator-Associated PneumoniaVariables
Independently Associated with VAP by Log.
Regress. Analysis
  • VariableAdjusted OR 95 Cl p
  • OSFI gt 3 10.2 4.5 - 23.0 lt
    0.001
  • Pat. age gt 60 yrs. 5.1 1.9 - 4.1 0.002
  • Prior antibiotics 3.1 1.4 - 6.9
    0.004
  • Pat. head position 2.91 .3 - 6.8 0.013

Kollef MH. JAMA 1993 2701965
9
Ventilator-associated Pneumonia Caused by
Potentially Drug-resistant Bacteria
  • Design Risk factor analysis of 135 consecutive
    episodes of VAP in a single ICU over 25 months
    in terms of potentially drug- resistant bacteria
  • Technique VAP was diagnosed by PSB and BAL
  • Results 77 VAP by potent. resist. bacteria
  • 58 VAP by other organisms

Trouillet JL, Chastre J et al. AJR CCM 1998
157531
10
Ventilator-associated Pneumonia
  • Results Potentially-resistant bacteria
  • S. aureus (MRSA), P.
    aeruginosa,
  • A. baumannii, S. maltophilia
  • Riskfactors Duration of MV (gt 7d/OR6.0)
  • Prior antibiotic use (OR13.5)
  • Prior use of broad - sp. ant. (OR4.1)
  • Conclusions Considering these risk factors may
    provide a more rational basis for selecting the
    initial therapy of VAP

Trouillet JL et al. AJR CCM 1998 157531
11
Characteristics of Patients Who Died from VAP
  • Case/Ageyr/ Sex Diagnosis
    pATB Microorganisms
  • 1 / 43 / M Heart transplant
    Yes Aspergillus species, Candida sp.
  • 2 / 59 / M COPD
    Yes Pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • 3 / 33 / M Heart transplant
    Yes P. aeruginosa, S marcescens
  • 4 / 76 / M CET
    Yes P. aeruginosa
  • 5 / 75 / M Cardiogenic shock
    Yes Aspergillus species
  • 6 / 62 / M CAP
    Yes P. aeruginosa, S. marcescens
  • 7 / 70 / M COPD
    Yes Acinetobacter, A. calcoacetius
  • 8 / 74 / M COPD
    Yes P. aeruginosa
  • 9 / 71 / F COPD
    Yes A. calcoacetius
  • 10 / 46 / M Asthma
    Yes P. aeruginosa
  • 11 / 65 / M Cardiac surgery
    Yes P. aeruginosa
  • 12 / 72 / F Pancreatitis
    Yes P. aeruginosa
  • 13 / 54 / M Septic shock
    Yes Proteus mirabilis
  • 17 / 51 / M Multiple trauma
    No S. marcescens
  • 18 / 71 / M Thoracic surgery
    No P. aeruginosa

Rello J et al. Chest 1993 1041230
12
Ventilator-Associated Nosocomial Pneumonia
Recommendations for Diagnostic Bronchoscopic
Techniques
  • 1. Protected specimen brushing (PSB)
  • - No wedging into a peripheral position - gt103
    CFU/ml significant bacterial level

2. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) - Total amount
of fluid gt140 ml - gt104 CFU/ml significant
bacterial level
Controversy Diagnostic value of PSB/BAL in
patients receiving antibiotics
International Consensus Conference, Memphis, May
1992. Chest 102(1) 1992
13
Evaluation of Diagnosis of Pneumonia
Operative values of protected specimen brush
(PSB) and broncho-alveolar lavage (BAL) in four
recent studies systematically referring to
histology

Sensitivity Specificity
authors year PSB
BAL PSB
BAL Torres 1994 36 50
50 45 Marquette 1995 58 47 89
100 Chastre 1995 82 91 89
78 Papazian 1995 42 58 95 95
Lode H et al. Crit Care Clinics 1998
14(1)119-133
14
Invasive and Noninvasive Strategies for
Management of Suspected Ventilator-associated
Pneumonia (I)
  • Background Optimal management of patients with
    clinically suspected VAP is a controversial issue

Design Multicenter, randomized trial in 31
french ICU including 413 patients
Interventions - Invasive Management Bronchoscop
y with quantitative cultures of BAL or PSB -
Noninvasive Management Clinical criteria and
nonquantitative analysis of endotracheal
aspirates
Fagon JY et al. Ann Intern Med 2000 132621-30
15
Actuarial 28-day Survival Among 413 Patients
Assigned to the Invasive (solid line) or Clinical
(dashed line) Management Strategy
Fagon JY et al. Annals of Internal Medicine 2000
132621-30
16
Invasive and Noninvasive Strategies for
Management of Suspected Ventilator-associated
Pneumonia (II)
  • Measurements - Death from any cause
  • - Quantification of organ failure
  • - Antibiotic use at 14 / 28 days

Interventions - Reduced mortality at day 14
(16.2 vers. 25.8 p 0.02) - Decreased
Sepsis-related Organ Failure Assessm. Score
on day 3 / 7 - Decreased antibiotic use on day
14 / 28 (11.5 vers. 7.5 antib.-free days on
day 28)
Fagon JY et al. Ann Intern Med 2000 132621-30
17
Nosokomiale PneumonieDiagnose und Therapie nach
Singh et al (2000)
Klinischer Verdacht auf Infektion
Chastre J, Fagon JY (2002) AJRCCM 165867-903
18
Nosokomiale PneumonieDiagnose und Therapie
invasive Strategie
Klinischer Verdacht auf Infektion
ja
ja
sofort gezielte AB-Therapie
Chastre J, Fagon JY (2002) AJRCCM 165867-903
19
Invasives Vorgehen Vorteile
  • Höhere Sicherheit bei der Diagnosestellung
  • Durch Erregernachweis zielgerichtete
    Antibiotikatherapie möglich
  • Kontaminationen mit der Flora aus den
    oberen Atemwegen werden vermieden
  • Bewirkt restriktiven Einsatz von Antibiotika und
    dadurch eine geringere Resistenzentwicklung
  • Weniger Todesfälle
  • Schnellere Normalisierung von Organdysfunktionen,
  • Geringerer Antibiotikaverbrauch

Fagon et al (2000) Ann Intern Med
20
Invasives Vorgehen Nachteile
  • Invasive Methoden mit Risiken behaftet
  • Kosten
  • Technische Grenzen der Kulturverfahren
  • Verzögerung der initialen Antibiotikatherapie
  • Bei einem negativen Resultat, das evtl. falsch
    ist, erhält der Patient keine
    Therapie
  • Ergebnis erst verfügbar, wenn der Verlauf
    der Infektion nicht mehr
    beeinflusst werden kann

Fagon et al (2000) Ann Intern Med
21
Diagnosis of Nosocomial Pneumonia
Nosocomial Pneumonia
moderate
severe
VAP
(sputum), serology, blood cultures,
Legionella-antigen
therapy
  • BronchoscopyPSB or BALquantitative

progress
22
Bacteriology of Hospital-Acquired Pneumonia
  • Early-Onset Late-Onset
  • Pneumonia Pneumonia
    Other
  • S. Pneumoniae P. aeruginosa
    Anaerobic bacteria
  • H. Influenzae Enterobacter
    spp. Legionella pneumophila
  • Moraxella catarrhalis Acinetobacter spp.
    Influenza A and B
  • S. aureus K. pneumoniae
    Respiratory syncitial virus
  • Aerobic
  • gram-negative bacilli S. marcescens
    Fungi
  • E. coli
  • Other

Francioli et al.Clin Microbiol Infect 1997
3(suppl 1)61-76 in patients with risk factors,
including methicillin-resistant S. aureus
23
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia Studie
  • Kennzahlen
  • Untersuchungszeitraum Juli 1997 bis Juni 1998
  • 273 Aufnahmen auf die ITS (8 Betten)
  • 111 Pat. in die Studie eingeschlossen (31 w, 80
    m, 58 13,3 J.)
  • 65/111 Pat. (59) mit signifikantem Nachweis
    pathogener Erreger in den Untersuchungsmaterialien
    .
  • 16 Pat. (14) mit Stenotrophomonas-Nachweis (2
    w, 14 m) im Bronchialsekret (68), Sputum (19),
    Pleuraexsudat (13)

24
Stenotrophomonas-Infektionen auf der
Intensivstation - Epidemiologie
  • ACourt et al. SMA verantwortlich für 5 der
    nosokomialen Pneumonien auf der ITS
  • Thorax 1992,47,465-473
  • Ibrahim EH, Ward S, Sherman G, Kollef MH.
  • Vergleichende Analyse von Intensivpatienten mit
    early-onset und late-onset Pneumonien.
  • 3.668 Intensivpatienten (internistisch und
    chirurgisch)
  • 420 nosokomiale Pneumonien (11,5)
  • 235 early onset 185 late onset pneumonia
  • P. aeruginosa (38,4) ORSA (21,1)
  • S. maltophilia (11,4) OSSA (10,8)
  • Gesamtletalität 41

Chest 2000,117,1434-42
25
Antibiotic Therapy in Nosocomial Pneumonia
versus
  • Monotherapy Antibiotic combination
  • Lower cost
    Higher cost
  • Lower risk of side-effects Possible
    lower risk of
    emergence of resistance?
  • No antagonistic effect
    Synergistic effectof antibiotics
  • No pharmacologic interactions Wider spectrum
  • Equal efficacy?
    Lower antibiotic dose

26
Antibiotic Monotherapy in HAP
  • Reference Drugs Results
    Comments
  • (Cure/Improv.)
  • R.D. Manji et al Cefoperazone
    Cefoper. 87 Lower costs
  • AJM 1988 versus
    Combin. 72 for monotherapy
  • Cefazol/Gentamycin
  • M.P. Fink et al Ciprofloxacin
    Ciprofloxacin 64 Imipenem 6 seizures
  • AAC 1994 versus
    Imipenem 56 Ciprofloxacin 1
  • Imipenem
  • A. Cometta etal Imipenem
    Imipenem 80 Combination 11
  • AAC 1994 versus
    Combination 86 nephrotoxic reaction
  • Imipenem/Netilmicin
  • E. Rubinstein, Ceftazidime
    Ceftazidime 85 Combination 9
  • H. Lode et al versus
    Combination 77 nephrotoxic reaction
  • CID 1995 Ceftriaxone/Tobramycin

27
Combination Therapy as a Tool to Prevent
Emergence of Bacterial Resistance
  • Design Overview of experimental data
    analysing antimicrobial mono-versus
    combination therapy.
  • Results In vitro Pk and animal data indicate
    that emergence of resistance with
    combination therapy is less common.
  • Problems - Demonstrated only in P. aeruginosa
    infections - No strong clinical trials

Mouton JW. Infection 1999
28
Mean Change (log values) of MIC for Ceftazidime
of Pseudomonas aeruginosa During Monotherapy or
Combined With Tobramycin in a in vitro
Pharmacokinetic Model
8 6 4 2 0
ceftazidime ceftazidime tobramycin
mean increase factor MIC
8 h
0 h
24 h
16 h
Mouton JW. 1999
29
Clinical Indications of Combinations
Enterobacter Pseudomonas Acinetobacter
  • Difficult to treat
  • Gram-nagatives
  • Clinical Arguments
  • Avoid mutation
  • Obtain synergistic effect
  • Possible prevention of the emergence of
    resistance
  • Extend the spectrum of antibacterial activities
  • against enterococci (using penicillin)
  • against anaerobes (using metronidazole)

Bergogne-Bérézine. Phoenix 1995
30
PK/PD Parameters A First Sight
SerumConcentration varying with time
  • Peak
  • Through
  • Area under the curve

peak
concentration
area under the curve
through
time
31
AUIC Prediction of Clinical and Microbiological
Outcome in RTI
Forrest A et al. Antimicrob Agents Chemother
1993371073-1081
32
Pharmacodynamic Evaluation of Factors Associated
With the Development of Bacterial Resistance in
Acutely Ill Patients During Therapy
  • Design Analysis of 107 pat. suffering from
    LRTI 128 pathogens and 5 antimicrobial
    regimes.
  • Parameters - MIC - before/after treatment
  • - AUC 0-24
  • - PK/PD model (Hill equation)

Thomas JK et al. AAC 1998 42521-27
33
AUIC versus Resistance
Thomas JK et al. AAC 1998
34
Scheduled Change of Antibiotic Classes (I)
A strategy to decrase the incidence of
ventilator-associated pneumonia
  • Study design Prospective before - after study
  • Patients 680 with cardiac surgery
  • Location ICU-St. Louis, Missouri
  • Barnes-Jewish Hospital
    (900 beds)
  • Intervention During 12-months period
    (8/95-8/96)
  • empiric treatment
  • - first 6-months period
    ceftazidime
  • - second 6-months period
    ciprofloxacin

Kollef MH. AJRCCM 1997 1561040
35
Kollef et al.AJRCCM 19971651040-48
36
Scheduled Change of Antibiotic Classes (II)
Results
  • Incidence of VAP Before 11.6 (n 327)
  • After 6.7 (n 353)
  • VAP with resist. GNB 4.0 versus 0.9
  • Bacteremia due to
  • ARGNB 1.7 versus 0.3
  • Conclusion These data suggest that a scheduled
    change of antibiotic classes can reduce the
    incidence of VAP attributed to ARGNB.

Kollef MH. AJRCCM 1997 1561040
37
Classifying Patients With Hospital-acquired
Pneumonia
Severity of illness
severe
mild to moderate
no risk factors
with risk factors
with risk factors
no risk factors
onset any time
onset any time
onset any time
early onset
late onset
Group 1
Group 3
Group 1
Consensus Statement of the American Thoracic
Society Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1996
1531711-1725
38
Patients with mild to moderate hospital-acquired
pneumonia, no unusual risk factors, onset any
time or patients with severe hospital acquired
pneumonia with early onset
  • Core organisms Core antibiotics
  • Enteric gram-negative bacilli Cephalosporin
  • (Non-Pseudomonal) second generation or
  • Enterobacter spp. Nonpseudomonal third
    generation E. coli
  • Klebsiella spp. Beta-lactam / beta-lactamase-
  • Proteus spp. inhibitor combination
  • Serratia marcescens
  • Haemophilus influenzae If allergic to penicillin
  • S. aureus (Methicillin-sensitive) Fluoroquinolone
    or
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae Clindamycin aztreonam

Excludes patients with immunosuppression
Consensus Statement of the American Thoracic
Society Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1996
1531711-1725
39
Patients with mild to moderate hospital-acquired
pneumonia, with risk factors, onset any time
  • Core organisms plus Core antibiotics plus
  • Anaerobes Clindamycin
  • (recent abdomial surgery) or beta-lactam /
    beta-lactamase-
  • witnessed aspiration) inhibitor (alone)
  • Staphylococcus aureus /- Vancomycin
  • (coma, head trauma, diabetes (until
    methicillin- resistant
  • mellitus, renal failure) S. aureus is ruled
    out)
  • Legionella Erythromycin /- Rifampicin
  • (high dose steroids)
  • Pseudomonas aeruginosa Treat as severe
    hospital-acquired
  • (prolonged ICU stay, steroids, pneumonia (Group
    3)
  • antibiotics, structural lung disease)

Excludes patients with immunosuppression
Rifampicin may be added if Legionella species is
documented
Consensus Statement of the American Thoracic
Society Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1996
1531711-1725
40
Patients with severe hospital-acquired pneumonia,
with risk factors, early onset or patients with
severe hospital acquired pneumonia with late
onset
  • Core organisms plus Therapy
  • P. aeruginosa Aminoglycoside or ciprofloxacin
  • Acinetobacter spp. plus one of the following
  • Consider MRSA Antipseudomonal penicillin
  • beta-lactam / beta-lactamase inhibitor
  • Ceftazidime or cefoperazone
  • Imipenem
  • Aztreonam
  • /- Vancomycin

Excludes patients with immunosuppression
Aztreonam efficacy is limited to enteric
gram-negative bacilli and should not be used in
combination with aminoglycoside if gram-positive
or H. influenzae infection is of concern
Consensus Statement of the American Thoracic
Society Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1996
1531711-1725
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