Title: Pneumonia
1Pneumonia
- Deborah Goldstein
- Georgetown ID Fellow
- February 9, 2009
2Outline
- CAP, HAP, HCAP, VAP bugs, diagnostics, drugs
- MDR organisms, therapies
- PNA Prevention
- Questions are adapted from MYKSAP
- 1. Infectious Disease Society of
America/American Thoracic Society Guidelines on
Management of CAP in Adults, CID 2007 - 2. ATS Guidelines for Management of Adults with
HAP, VAP, and HCAP, Am J Respir Crit Care Med
2005 - Level 1 evidence from RCTs. Level 2
nonrandomized trials (patient series, cohort
studies). Level 3 expert opinion.
3Pneumonia Definitions
- Community-acquired PNA (CAP)
- Cough/fever/sputum production infiltrate
- Healthcare-associated PNA (HCAP)
- PNA that develops within 48 hours of admission
(but is not present on admission) in pts with - Hospitalization in acute care hospital for 2 d
in past 90 d - Residence in NH or LTC facility
- Chronic dialysis within 30 days
- Home IV therapy, home wound care in past 30 days
- Family member with MDR pathogen
- Hospital-acquired PNA (HAP)
- PNA 48 hours after admission
- Ventilator-associated PNA (VAP)
- PNA 48-72 hours after intubation
4Almost 1 million annual episodes of CAP in adults
65 yrs in the US
5Drug Resistant Strep Pneumoniae
- 40 of U.S. Strep pneumo CAP has some antibiotic
resistance - PCN, cephalosporins, macrolides, tetracyclines,
clinda, bactrim, quinolones - All U.S. MDR strains are sensitive to vancomycin
or linezolid most are sensitive to respiratory
quinolones - Original definitions of ß-lactam resistance were
for meningitis (CSF drug levels are a fraction of
plasma levels) - PCN is effective against pneumococcal PNA at
concentrations that would fail for meningitis or
otitis media - For PNA, pneumococcal resistance to ß-lactams is
relative and can usually be overcome by
increasing ß-lactam doses (not for meningitis!)
ATS Guidelines, 2005
6- Pneumococcal CAP Be cautious if using PCN if
MIC 4. Avoid using PCN if MIC 8. - Remember that if MIC PCN-sensitive in sputum or blood (but need MIC
MIC Interpretive Standards for S. pneumoniae.
Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI)
2008 28123.
7Who is at risk for drug-resistant Strep Pneumo
CAP?
- Age 65 yrs
- ß-lactam therapy in past 3 months
- Alcoholism
- Medical comorbidities
- Immunosuppression
- Exposure to a child in day care
- Nursing home, long-term care facility, homeless
shelter
IDSA/ATS Guidelines 2007
8Resistant Pneumococcus
- A 44-year-old woman is hospitalized from the ER
with left lower lobe pneumonia. Medical history
is unremarkable except for recurrent urinary
tract infections for which she has received
various antibiotics. - On admission, temp 39.2 C. IV levofloxacin is
begun. - One day later, her temp has decreased to 38.1 C,
and blood cultures from the ER grow Strep pneumo
with minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) for
penicillin 1 µg/mL. - Which of the following is the most appropriate
therapy at this time? - Change to cefepime
- Change to vancomycin
- Change to ampicillinsulbactam
- Change to linezolid
- Continue levofloxacin
9PCN Resistant Pneumococcus
- Answer E continue levofloxacin
- Pt has bacteremic pneumococcal PNA with MIC1, so
PCN-sensitive, clinically improving on
levofloxacin - Continue levofloxacin until she meets criteria to
change to PO - If pt had meningitis with Strep pneumo PCN MIC
1, PCN would NOT be appropriate therapy - Organisms that are resistant to PCN are usually
sensitive to fluoroquinolones and are uniformly
sensitive to vanc and linezolid
10CAP Atypicals
- Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Chlamydophila pneumoniae,
Legionella Coxiella burnetii (Q fever),
Francisella tularensis (tularemia), Chlamydia
psittaci (psittacosis) - Approximately 15 of all CAP
- Atypical not detectable on gram stain wont
grow on standard media - Unlike bacterial CAP, often extrapulmonary
manifestations - Mycoplasma otitis, nonexudative pharyngitis,
watery diarrhea, erythema multiforme, increased
cold agglutinin titre - Chlamydophila laryngitis
- Most dont have a bacterial cell wall? Dont
respond to ß-lactams - Therapy macrolides, tetracyclines, quinolones
(intracellular penetration, interfere with
bacterial protein synthesis)
11Atypical PNA
- A 63-year-old man is brought to the ER with 4
days of fevers, cough, confusion, and mild
diarrhea. His wife reports he just returned from
a business trip where he stayed in a hotel. - In the ER Temp 103, BP 142/70, RR 24.
- Exam Ill-appearing. Rales at the left base.
- CXR LLL consolidation.
- Labs WBC 26K, Hct 44, BUN/Cr 42/2.3, AST 107,
ALT 110, Na 130 - All of the following would be appropriate therapy
EXCEPT - Azithromycin
- Doxycycline
- Levofloxacin
- Moxifloxacin
- Imipenem
12CAP Legionella
- Answer E Imipenem. Imipenem has very broad
coverage, but NO ATYPICALS. - Consider in returning travelers from hotels,
cruise ships within the past 2 weeks - Extrapulmonary CNS (headache, AMS), GI
(diarrhea, abd pain), cardiac (relative
bradycardia), hepatic (transaminitis), renal
(incr. creatinine), muscle involvement (incr.
CPK), low Na, low phos - Infects alveolar macrophages (intracellular)
- Tx Fluoroquinolones or azithromycin
- Legionella Urine Ag sensitivity 70-90,
specificity 99. - Detects only Serogroup 1.
- Serogroup 2, 3 cause 5-20 of disease.
- Gold standard culture on BCYE agar.
13CAP CA-MRSA
- CA-MRSA PNA remains rare in most communities but
is anticipated to be an emerging threat - May cause severe disease with abscess, empyema
formation necrotizing or cavitary PNA - Risk factors for CA-MRSA PNA ESRD, IVDU, prior
antibiotic therapy (especially quinolones), prior
influenza - Linezolid at least as effective as vancomycin
for treatment of MRSA PNA - Do not use Daptomycin (inactivated by lung
surfactant) - Negative gram stain and culture prior to
antibiotics is adequate to withold or stop tx for
MRSA
IDSA/ATS Guidelines 2007
14Who is at risk for Pseudomonal PNA?
- Immunocompromised pts (HIV, solid organ or bone
marrow transplant, neutropenic, chronic oral
steroids) - Alcoholics
- Frequent prior antibiotic use
- Recent hospital admission
- Structural lung abnormalities
- Cystic fibrosis, bronchiectasis, severe COPD
- Rare in previously healthy pts
- Gram stain/sputum culture (if good quality) is
usually adequate to exclude need for empiric
coverage
15Who is at risk for which pathogens?
- PNA in nursing home/long term care facility
residents mirrors PNA in hospitalized pts - Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, MRSA
- Chronic hemodialysis
- Increased risk of MRSA (not Pseudomonas or
Acinetobacter) - COPD
- Increased risk for Pseudomonas (not MRSA)
16Remember these associations
- Alcoholism Strep pneumo, oral anaerobes, K.
pneumo, Acinetobacter, MTB - COPD/smoking H. influenzae, Pseudomonas,
Legionella, Strep pneumo, Moraxella catarrhalis,
Chlamydophila pneumoniae - Aspiration Klebsiella, E. Coli, oral anaerobes
- HIV S. pneumo, H. influ, P. aeruginosa, MTB,
PJP, Crypto, Histo, Aspergillus, atypical
mycobacteria - Recent hotel, cruise ship Legionella
- Structural lung disease (bronchiectasis)
Pseudomonas, Burkholderia cepacia, Staph aureus
17CAP Diagnostics
- Outpatients testing is OPTIONAL
- Most pts do well on empiric therapy
- Inpatients low yield of sputum blood cultures,
so perform only if result will change antibiotic
management or test will be high yield.... - Blood cultures for probable pathogen in 5-14
of hospitalized CAP - Sputum gram stain usually poor quality. Only
14 yield causative organism - Sputum culture collect prior to antibiotics for
best yield - Pneumococcal Urine Ag Sensitivity 50-80,
specificity 90 - Influenza rapid nasal swab sensitivity 50-70,
specificity 100
18- Blood sputum culture, pneumococcal urine Ag
severe CAP, chronic disease, immune defects - Legionella urine Ag severe CAP, pts with
recent travel
IDSA/ATS Guidelines 2007
19Outpatient CAP therapy
- Previously healthy, without risk factors for DRSP
(age 65 yrs, recent ß-lactams, alcoholism,
medical comorbidities, immunosuppression, nursing
home....) - Macrolide (azithro, clarithro, erythromycin)
(level 1) - Doxycycline (level III)
- Heart/ lung/ liver/ kidney disease, DM, EtOH,
malignancies, asplenia, immunosuppression,
antibiotics in past 3 months or any DRSP risk - Respiratory quinolone (Moxi, Levo 750 mg) (level
1) OR - ß-lactam PLUS macrolide (level 1)
- ß-lactam Amox 1g TID OR Augmentin 2g bid (high
dose PCNs to overcome Strep pneumo resistance).
Alt cefuroxime 500 mg bid.
20Outpatient CAP
- A 35-year-old woman with mild asthma has a 3-day
history of fever, productive cough, and wheezing.
Her 5-year old son recently had cough and fever
to 38.9 C. She has a 10-pack-year smoking
history and quit 3 years ago. - Temp 38.2 C, HR 100, BP 115/75, RR 16/min, 94
RA - Bronchial breath sounds and a few crackles in the
lateral right lower chest, mildly audible
wheezing. - WBC 11,900/µL, 80 neutrophils, 2 bands.
- CXR right middle lobe consolidation.
- Which of the following is most appropriate at
this time? - A. Await results of sputum culture before
beginning therapy - Begin trimethoprimsulfamethoxazole
- Begin ciprofloxacin
- Begin azithromycin
- Begin gentamicin
21Outpatient CAP
- Answer D Start azithromycin
- Likely pathogens Strep pneumo, atypicals
(Mycoplasma, Chlamydophila, Legionella) - Her mild asthma does not put her at risk for
community-acquired pneumonia due to unusual
pathogens - CAP in an outpatient without other risk factors
- Macrolide (azithro, clarithro, erythro), or
doxycycline - Sputum gram stain, culture not high yield in
outpatients - Bactrim poor Strep pneumo coverage, almost no
atypical coverage - Cipro poor Strep pneumo coverage but covers
atypicals
22CAP Outpatient therapy duration
- No standardized recommendation for duration of
therapy - Treat for a minimum of 5 days (often 7-10 days)
- Pts should be afebrile for 48-72 hrs before
stopping therapy - Azithromycin
- Long tissue half life
- Trials as short as 3-5 days in outpatient CAP
have been successful - Levaquin
- At least 5 days
23PNA Outpatient or Inpatient?
- CURB-65
- 5 indicators of increased mortality confusion,
BUN 7, RR 30, SBP 65 - Mortality 2 factors?9, 3 factors?15, 5
factors?57 - Score 0-1?outpt. Score 2?inpt. Score 3?ICU.
- Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI)
- 20 variables including underlying diseases
stratifies pts into 5 classes based on mortality
risk - No RCTs comparing CURB-65 and PSI
- Not routinely used in GUH clinical practice
though guidelines give them level 1, strong
rating
IDSA/ATS Guidelines 2007
24PNA Medical floor or ICU?
- 1 major or 3 minor criteria severe CAP?ICU
- Major criteria
- Invasive ventilation, septic shock on pressors
- Minor criteria
- RR30 multilobar infiltrates confusion BUN
20 WBC
hypotension requiring aggressive fluids,
PaO2/FiO2 - No prospective validation of these criteria!
IDSA/ATS Guidelines 2007
25CAP Inpatient therapy
- General medical floor
- Respiratory quinolone (level 1) OR
- IV ß-lactam PLUS macrolide (IV or PO) (level 1)
- ß-lactams cefotaxime, ceftriaxone, ampicillin
ertapenem - May substitute doxycycline for macrolide (level
3) - ICU
- ß-lactam (ceftriaxone, cefotaxime, amp-sulbactam)
PLUS EITHER quinolone (level 1) OR azithro (level
2) - PCN-allergic respiratory quinolone PLUS
aztreonam - Pseudomonal coverage (level 3)
- Antipneumococcal, antipseudomonal ß-lactam
(pip-tazo, cefepime, imi, mero) PLUS EITHER
(cipro or levo) OR (aminoglycoside AND Azithro)
OR (aminoglycoside AND respiratory quinolone) - CA-MRSA coverage Vanc or Linezolid (level 3)
26CAP Inpatient Therapy Pearls
- Give 1st dose Antibiotics in ER (no specified
time frame) - Switch from IV to oral when pts are
hemodynamically stable and clinically improving - Discharge from hospital
- As soon as clinically stable, no active medical
problems - Duration of therapy is usually 7-10 days
- Treat for a minimum of 5 days (level 1)
- Before stopping therapy afebrile for 48-72
hours, hemodynamically stable, RR
90, normal mental status - Treat longer if initial therapy wasnt active
against identified pathogen or if complications
(lung abscess, empyema...)
27Inpatient CAP
- 73-year-old man with COPD and type 2 DM has 1 day
of increasing cough, dyspnea, fever, and chills.
He has a 60-pack-year smoking history. - Temp 38.0 C, HR 100, BP 135/85, RR 20, O2 sat
86 RA. - Exam obese, mild respiratory distress.
- Decreased breath sounds bilaterally, scattered
rhonchi, crackles at left base. - Labs WBC 9,700, 72 neutrophils, 10 bands, BUN
40, Cr 2.4 - CXR patchy infiltrate at the left lung base.
- The patient is hospitalized.
- Which of the following is the most appropriate IV
therapy? - A. Ceftriaxone plus azithromycin
- B. Ampicillinsulbactam
- C. Ticarcillin plus tobramycin
- D. High-dose penicillin
- E. Trimethoprimsulfamethoxazole
28Inpatient CAP
- Answer A ceftriaxone and azithromycin
- The pt is hospitalized.
- Does he need DRSP coverage? Yes.
- Age 60, DM, COPD
- Does he need Pseudomonal coverage? No.
- Not immunocompromised, not on chronic steroids,
not alcoholic, no recent prior antibiotic use or
hosp admission, no structural lung abnormalities
(his COPD is not severe) - General medical floor respiratory quinolone OR
(ß-lactam PLUS macrolide) - ICU without pseudomonal coverage ß-lactam PLUS
(macrolide OR quinolone) - The other 4 choices do not cover atypicals
29Inpatient CAP
- A 72-year-old male smoker with COPD was
hospitalized 2 days ago with fever, cough,
dyspnea and patchy left lower lobe PNA. - Initial WBC 14,300/µL. O2 sat 94 on 2L.
- IV levofloxacin was started on admission.
- Hospital day 3 Pt has been afebrile for the past
18 hours. He has good oral intake, his cough has
decreased, and he is no longer dyspneic. WBC
9,600. O2 sat 92 on RA. - Repeat CXR no change in size of LLL infiltrate.
- Which of the following is most appropriate at
this time? - A. CT scan of the chest
- B. Consultation for fiberoptic bronchoscopy
- C. Replacement of IV levofloxacin with PO
levofloxacin - D. Addition of IV ceftriaxone
30Inpatient CAP
- Answer C switch IV to PO levofloxacin
- This pt with CAP is responding well to therapy
resolution of fever, cough, and dyspnea by day 3.
His leukocytosis normalized. Pt has a
functioning GI tract and can take oral
medication. - A stable CXR does not indicate treatment failure.
- Only two thirds of pts show radiographic clearing
of pneumonia by the fourth week of therapy.
31Inpatient CAP
- A 79-year-old woman who lives at home is
hospitalized for CAP. She had an apparent upper
respiratory tract infection 7 days ago and
developed left-sided pleuritic chest pain and
shaking chills 1 day before admission. Three
weeks ago, she had a UTI treated with Cipro. - Exam Temp 38.7 C, HR 110, BP 90/60, RR 24/min.
- Crackles, diminished breath sounds at the left
lung base, and egophony. - WBC 31,000, 85 neutrophils, 7 bands. CXR left
lower lobe infiltrate. - According to the hospital's antibiogram, local
isolates of Strep pneumo are often multi-drug
resistant 30 of isolates are resistant to
penicillin and 30 are resistant to macrolides. - Which of the following is the most appropriate
therapy for this patient at this time? - Intravenous vancomycin plus ceftriaxone
- Intravenous ceftriaxone plus azithromycin
- Intravenous levofloxacin
- Oral telithromycin
32CAP
- Answer B Intravenous ceftriaxone plus
azithromycin - Avoid Levaquin because her previous use of cipro
predisposes her to fluoroquinolone-resistant
pneumococcus. - Also, limit use of fluoroquinolones as first-line
therapy for CAP to limit the massive increase in
fluoroquinolone resistance. - Does she need vancomycin? No.
- Ceftriaxone is adequate for PNA even in the
setting of possible PCN-resistant Strep pneumo. - Does she need atypical coverage with
azithromycin? Yes. Vancomycin does NOT cover
atypicals. - Telithromycin is a ketolide (derived from
macrolide class) not yet recommended for CAP due
to hepatotoxicity.
33Severe CAP
- A 62-year-old man is evaluated in the ER with 3
days of fever, progressive dyspnea, and cough.
History of HTN, coronary artery disease, and MI 3
years ago. - Exam respiratory distress. T 39.4. HR 120. BP
88/60. RR 24. O2 sat 82 RA. Scattered crackles
and rhonchi are heard throughout both lung
fields. - CXR patchy infiltrates in the right upper and
lower lobes and left lower lobe. - Sputum and blood cultures are obtained, IV fluids
and supplemental oxygen are started, and IV
levofloxacin and ceftriaxone are begun. The
patient is admitted to the ICU. - Which of the following should also be done at
this time? - A. Request fiberoptic bronchoscopy
- B. Schedule a CT scan of the chest
- C. Order urine specimen for Legionella antigen
- D. Add intravenous vancomycin
34Severe CAP, ICU
- Answer C Order Legionella urine antigen
- Pt admitted to ICU because he met several minor
criteria for severe CAP - RR30 multilobar infiltrates confusion BUN
20 WBC
hypotension requiring aggressive fluids,
PaO2/FiO2 - Legionella testing is indicated in severe CAP
- Bronchoscopy does not typically provide useful
information in the initial evaluation of CAP in
an immunocompetent host unless an endobronchial
lesion is suspected. - There is no need for vanc as levofloxacin is
adequate Strep pneumo coverage
35CAP
- A 62-year-old man comes to the ER with 2 days of
fever, cough, and yellow-green sputum production.
The patient had severe PNA when he was 40,
following which he developed a daily cough and
whitish-yellow sputum production. He typically
receives one or two courses of antibiotics each
year when his sputum increases in volume and
becomes darker. He is a lifelong nonsmoker. - Exam Temp 38.7 C. Coarse breath sounds at the
posterior base of the right lung, with scattered
crackles and rhonchi. - WBC 13,500, 74 neutrophils, 12 bands.
- CXR patchy right lower lobe infiltrate. (A chest
film 2 years ago showed nonspecific increased
markings at the right lung base). - In choosing antibiotics, which organism should
you cover? - Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Respiratory syncytial virus
- Nocardia brasiliensis
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Chlamydophila pneumoniae
36CAP
- Answer D Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- This pt has underlying bronchiectasis, which
developed after a severe episode of CAP 22 yrs
ago he now has chronic cough and sputum
production and baseline CXR abnormalities that
suggest bronchiectasis - Bronchiectasis is a risk factor for Pseudomonas
aeruginosa CAP - Bronchiectatic airways may be chronically
colonized with many organisms, including
Pseudomonas - Illness is too acute in onset to be suggestive of
MTB - Nocardia lung infections occur most often in
immunosuppressed patients - Chlamydophila pneumoniae causes CAP but is not
associated with bronchiectasis or chronic airway
colonization
37CAP Influenza
- Inhale small aerosolized particles from coughing,
sneezing?1-4 day incubation? uncomplicated
influenza (fever, myalgia, malaise,
rhinitis)?PNA - Adults 65 account for 63 of annual
influenza-associated hospitalizations and 85 of
influenza-related deaths - CXR findings often subtle
- Respiratory isolation for suspected or documented
influenza - Bacterial PNA (S. pneumo, S. aureus) may follow
viral PNA
Murata Y. Recognizing viral causes of CAP.
Journal of Resp Dis 2008.
38www.cdc.gov/flu/weekly, 2/8/09
39Influenza Therapy
- 06-08 widespread resistance to Adamantanes
among influenza A strains not recommended - Neuraminidase inhibitors
- 70-90 effective for prophylaxis
- Give within 48h of symptom onset to reduce
duration/severity of illness, and viral shedding
Red carried by GUH inpt pharmacy
40Influenza Resistance
- 07-08 11 of influenza A (H1N1) was
oseltamivir-resistant - 08-09 98 of influenza A (H1N1) is
oseltamivir-resistant all sensitive to
zanamivir, amantadine, rimantadine - Oseltamivir-resistant virus same severity of
illness - Influenza A (H3N2) and Influenza B viruses still
sensitive to oseltamivir - Proportion of all U.S. influenza that is H1N1 is
unknown! - CDC 12/08
- Suspected influenza A (H1N1) virus infxn or
exposure zanamivir (alternate oseltamivir
rimantadine) - GUH substitute amantadine for rimantadine
- Influenza B oseltamivir or zanamivir
41HCAP, HAP, VAP
- Healthcare-associated PNA (HCAP)
- PNA within 48 hours of admission in pts with
- Hospitalization in acute care hospital for 2
days in past 90 days - Residence in NH or LTC facility
- Chronic dialysis within 30 days
- Home IV therapy, home wound care in past 30d
- Family member with MDR pathogen
- Hospital-acquired PNA (HAP)
- 48 hours after admission
- Ventilator-associated PNA (VAP)
- 48-72 hours after intubation
42Organisms in HAP, VAP
- Pts with no known risk factors for MDR pathogens
- Strep pneumo, H. influenzae, MSSA
- Sensitive enteric GNR E. Coli, Klebsiella,
Enterobacter, Proteus, Serratia - Risk Factors for MDR organisms
- Pts with ANY Risk factors for HCAP
- Antibiotics in the past 90 days
- Current hospitalization 5 days
- High frequency of antibiotic resistance
43Multi-drug Resistant Organisms
- Common MDR Organisms
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- MRSA
- SPACE Organisms Serratia, Proteus,
Acinetobacter, Citrobacter, Enterobacter - ESBL Klebsiella, E Coli
- Stenotrophomonas maltophilia
- Burkholderia cepacia
ATS Guidelines, 2005
44HAP, HCAP, VAP MRSA
- Standard of therapy vancomycin
- Failure rates 40 with vanc 1g iv bid due to
inadequate dosing - Aim for vanc trough 15 mg/L (no prospective
trials validate this, though) - 2 RCTs Linezolid equivalent to vanc in HAP, VAP
(may even be superior) - 1 RCT Synercid (quinupristin-dalfopristin)
worse outcomes than vanc in HAP - Remember daptomycin is inactivated by pulmonary
surfactant. DO NOT USE in PNA.
ATS Guidelines, 2005
45HAP
- 72-year-old NH resident with COPD, DM transferred
to ICU on day 12 of admission. Intubated for
respiratory distress. - Temp 38.6, BP 130/80. WBC 3.0.
- Sputum gram stain many WBC, GNR. Cx pending.
- All of the following are likely etiologies
EXCEPT - Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus
- Acinetobacter baumanii
- ESBL E. Coli
- Serratia marsescens
46HAP Organisms
- Answer is B VRE
- Enterococcus is very rare cause of pneumonia
- Question Part 2 The patients sputum culture
grows Klebsiella pneumoniae, ESBL. - What is the best treatment option?
- A. Aztreonam
- B. Levofloxacin
- C. Tobramycin
- D. Meropenem
47Extended Spectrum ß-lactamases
- Answer D Meropenem
- ESBL resistance is plasmid-mediated
- ESBLs hydrolyze extended-spectrum cephalosporins
with an oxyimino side chain - RESISTANT Ceftriaxone, ceftazadime, cefepime
- RESISTANT Aztreonam
- ESBLs cannot inactivate cephamycins
- SENSITIVE 2nd gen cephalosporins cefoxitin,
cefotetan - ESBLs most common in Klebsiella, E. Coli
- Tx No RCTs, but carbapenems associated with
improved bacteria clearance and improved survival
48HAP/VAP Risk Factors
- 1. Intubation and mechanical ventilation increase
the risk of HAP 6-21 fold - Reduce vent duration vent weaning protocols,
decreased sedation. Noninvasive ventilation. - 2. Leakage of bacteria around the endotracheal
tube cuff or aspiration of oropharyngeal
pathogens ? colonization of lower resp tract ?
PNA - Limit sedatives and paralytic agents that depress
cough - Semi-recumbent (30-45), not supine! especially
during enteral feeding - 3. Antihistamines, antacids?decrease gastric
acidity
49HAP, VAP Therapy Pearls
- Start empiric antibiotics early. Delay in
starting appropriate antibiotics ? increased
mortality - Choose initial Abx based on risk factors for
specific pathogens, local patterns of Abx
resistance and organism prevalence - Do not change Abx in first 48-72 hrs unless pt
deteriorates or culture results dictate it - If not clinically improved at 48-72 hrs, adjust
antibiotic therapy - Narrow antibiotics when culture results are known
ATS Guidelines, 2005
50HAP, VAP Antibiotics
- If early-onset PNA (organisms
- Bugs Strep pneumo, H. influenzae, MSSA, E. coli,
K. pneumo, Enterobacter, Proteus, Serratia - Drugs Ceftriaxone, cipro/levo/moxi,
amp-sulbactam or Ertapenem - If late-onset PNA (5d) and RFs for MDR
organisms - Bugs P. aeruginosa, ESBLs, Acinetobacter, MRSA
- Drugs (antipseudomonal cephalosporin or
carbepenem or ß-lactam/ß-lactam inhibitor) PLUS
(antipseudomonal quinolone OR aminoglycoside)
PLUS (Linezolid or vanc) - (Cefepime/Ceftazadime or Imipenem/Meropenem or
pip-tazo) PLUS (Cipro/Levo OR Amik/Gent/Tobramycin
) PLUS (Linezolid or vanc)
ATS Guidelines, 2005
51HCAP Management
- An 82-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital
for CAP. She lives alone and was hospitalized 2
months ago for urosepsis treated with cipro. - On admission, she was clinically stable with
right middle and lower lobe consolidations.
Ceftriaxone was started but she deteriorated with
worsening dyspnea, progressive hypoxemia, and
persistent fever. - 48 hours after admission, she is transferred to
the ICU for respiratory failure - Exam HR 124, RR 40, O2 sat 85 on 100
nonrebreather. - Rhonchi in all lung fields. Normal cardiac exam.
No leg swelling. - CXR diffuse bilateral infiltrates.
- She is intubated. Blood, urine, and endotracheal
tube aspirate cultures are sent. - Which is the appropriate next step in managing
this patient? - A. Bronchoscopy with protected specimen brushing
- B. Doppler ultrasonography of the lower
extremities - C. Change of antibiotics to vancomycin,
cefepime, and ciprofloxacin pending cultures - D. CT scan of the sinuses, and aspiration of
maxillary sinus fluid
52HCAP
- Answer C Change of antibiotic therapy to
vancomycin, cefepime, and ciprofloxacin pending
culture results - Her recent hospital admission 2 months ago puts
her at risk for HCAP with MRSA and Pseudomonas - Her HCAP worsened after 48 hours ceftriaxone
therapy - She now needs broader coverage for MRSA and
Pseudomonas - (Antipseudomonal cephalosporin or carbepenem or
ß-lactam/ß-lactam inhibitor) PLUS
(antipseudomonal quinolone OR aminoglycoside)
PLUS (Linezolid or vanc) - (Cefepime/Ceftazadime or Imipenem/Meropenem or
Zosyn) PLUS (Cipro/Levo OR Amik/Gent/Tobramycin)
PLUS (Linezolid or vanc) - Bronchoscopy with protected specimen sampling has
not been shown to improve outcomes beyond that
achieved by lower respiratory tract cultures
53VAP 8 days vs. 15 days of antibiotics
- Traditionally, VAP was treated for 14-21d because
shorter therapy was thought to have higher
relapse rate - Prospective, randomized, double-blind trial of
401 pts in 51 French ICUs, 1999-2002 - Excluded neutropenics, AIDS, immunosuppressants,
long-term steroids - VAP diagnosed by BAL culture
- Randomized to 8 or 15 days of antibiotics
Chastre J, et al. Comparison of 8 vs 15 days of
antibiotic therapy for ventilator-associated PNA
in adults, JAMA 2003.
54VAP 8 vs. 15 days of antibiotics
- Pseudomonas 18, Strep 14, MSSA 12, EColi 7,
MRSA 7.... - No difference in mortality (18 vs. 17),
recurrent infection rate (29 vs. 26), of
mechanical ventilation-free days, length of ICU
stay - Among pts who developed recurrent infections, MDR
pathogens emerged more often in pts who had
received 15d antibiotics - Pts w/VAP caused by Pseudomonas,
Stenotrophomonas, Acinetobacter had higher rates
of recurrent infection in the 8-day group, but no
increase in mortality - Conclusion treat VAP for 8 days when you have a
documented pathogen, except in immunocompromised
pts. Consider extended therapy in Pseudomonas,
Steno, Acinetobacter VAP.
Chastre J, et al. Comparison of 8 vs 15 days of
antibiotic therapy for ventilator-associated PNA
in adults, JAMA 2003.
55What dose in HAP, VAP, HCAP?
- Higher doses provide better pseudomonal coverage,
adequate lung penetration - Vanc 15 mg/kg q12 (not 1g iv q12)
- Levofloxacin 750 mg iv qd (not 500mg)
- Cipro 400 mg iv q8 (not q12)
- Cefepime 2g iv q8
- Ceftazidime 2g iv q8
- Meropenem 1g iv q8
- Piperacillin/Tazobactam 4.5g iv q6h (not 3.375 iv
q6)
ATS Guidelines, 2005
56CAP Prevention Influenza Vaccine
- Annual, inactivated, IM
- Influenza vaccine reduces incidence of
influenza, risk of influenza-related
hospitalization/mortality, and risk of bacterial
CAP - All persons 50 yrs old
- High-risk persons 6 mos - 49 yrs old (chronic
heart/lung disease including asthma DM renal
dysfunction hemoglobinopathies
immunocompromising conditions/medications) - Residents in long-term care facilities
- Pregnant women
- Health care workers
- Household contacts of high-risk persons
57CAP Prevention Pneumovax
- Give pneumovax to prevent pneumococcal PNA, but
even more to prevent complications and mortality
from invasive infection (bacteremia, meningitis) - The 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine
is recommended for - All persons 65 yrs old
- High-risk persons 2-64 yrs old (Chronic
heart/lung/kidney/liver disease, DM, CSF leaks,
alcoholism, asplenia, immunocompromising
conditions/medications, Native Americans, Alaska
natives, long-term care facility residents) - Current smokers
- Contraindicated in pregnancy
- One-time revaccination after 5 yrs for adults 65
(if first dose given before age 65), asplenics,
and immunocompromised persons
58Unusual Pneumonias
History is KEY Travel, pets, occupational
exposures, hobbies, sick contacts, geographic
location, season
59Remember these associations
- Exposure to bat or bird droppings Histoplasma
capsulatum - Exposure to birds Chlamydophila psittaci (if
poultry avian influenza) - Exposure to rabbits Francisella tularensis
- Exposure to farm animals or parturient cats
Coxiella burnetti (Q fever) - Travel to or residence in southwestern United
States Coccidioides species, Hantavirus - Travel to or residence in Southeast and East
Asia Burkholderia pseudomallei, avian influenza,
SARS - In context of bioterrorism Bacillus anthracis
(anthrax), Yersinia pestis (plague), Francisella
tularensis (tularemia)
60Tularemia
- Francisella tularensis
- Rabbits, squirrels, rodents
- Hunters, landscapers
- More common in South-central Western states
- 1st Doxycycline
- Alt gentamicin, streptomycin
61Psittacosis
- Chlamydophila psittaci
- Exposure to birds
- Bird owners, pet shop employees, vets
- 1st Tetracycline
- Alt Macrolide
Alex
62Q fever
- Coxiella burnetti
- Exposure to farm animals or parturient cats
- 1st Tetracycline, 2nd Macrolide
63Histoplasmosis
- Histoplasma capsulatum
- Exposure to bat (guano) or bird droppings
- Caves (spelunking), construction sites
- 1st itraconazole
- Alt Amphotericin B
64Travel-related PNAs
- Southwestern US
- Coccidioides spp.
- Hantavirus
- Plague
- Southeast East Asia
- Avian influenza
- SARS
- Burkholderia pseudomallei
- Cruise ship stay
- Hotels
- Legionella
- Influenza
65HAP Diagnosis
- Clinical signs (new fever, purulent sputum,
leukocytosis, positive culture of sputum or
tracheal aspirate) AND new or progressive
radiographic infiltrate - Tracheobronchitis clinical signs without
infiltrate - Associated with longer length of ICU stay, longer
duration of mechanical ventilation no increase
in mortality - Antibiotics may reduce incidence of subsequent
PNA - Tracheal colonization in intubated pts in absence
of clinical findings is NOT infxn ? no
antibiotics - 3 RCTs No mortality benefit to bronch culture
vs. endotracheal aspirate culture (1 RCT
mortality benefit to bronchoscopy)
66CAP Viral
- Viruses cause 1-29 of CAP
- Healthy adults self-limited URIs
- Elderly, immunocompromised, cardiopulmonary
disease severe LRTIs - 1 Influenza A, B
- Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), Parainfluenza
virus (PIV), Human metapneumovirus (hMPV) - Immunocompromised Coronavirus, Adenovirus,
Rhinovirus - CXR diffuse, interstitial, alveolar infiltrates,
lobar consolidation. - Dx Antigen testing for Influenza. Convalescent
serologic titers. Viral PCR. - Tx Supportive. Steroids. Empiric antibiotics.
Antivirals? Very little literature in adults.