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CommunityAcquired Pneumonia

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Describe the common pathogenesis and pathogens of pneumonia. Discuss diagnosis and initial management of community acquired pneumonia (CAP) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CommunityAcquired Pneumonia


1
Community-Acquired Pneumonia
  • Joanna M. Delaney, D.O.
  • Georgetown University /
  • Providence Hospital
  • June 8, 2007

2
Objectives
  • Describe the common pathogenesis and pathogens of
    pneumonia
  • Discuss diagnosis and initial management of
    community acquired pneumonia (CAP)
  • Understand features of the Pneumonia PORT
    Severity Index
  • Discuss the IDSA/ATS guidelines and
    recommendations for final antibiotic choice
  • Understand issues in basic management for
    pneumonia in children, nursing home patients, and
    immunocompromised patients.

3
Epidemiology
  • Unclear! Few population-based statistics on the
    condition alone
  • CDC combines PNA with influenza for morbidity
    mortality data
  • PNA influenza 7th leading causes of death in
    the US (2001)
  • Age-adjusted death rate 21.8 per 100,000
  • Mortality rate 1-5 out-Pt, 12 In-Pt, 40 ICU
  • Death rates increase with comorbidity and age
  • Affects race and sex equally

4
Community Acquired Pneumonia
  • Infection of the lung parenchyma in a person who
    is not hospitalized or living in a long-term care
    facility for 2 weeks
  • 5.6 million cases annually in the U.S.
  • Estimated total annual cost of health care 8.4
    billion
  • Most common pathogen S. pneumo (60-70 of CAP
    cases)

5
Nosocomial Pneumonia
  • Hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP)
  • Occurs 48 hours or more after admission, which
    was not incubating at the time of admission
  • Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP)
  • Arises more than 48-72 hours after endotracheal
    intubation

6
Nosocomial Pneumonia
  • Healthcare-associated pneumonia (HCAP)
  • Patients who were hospitalized in an acute care
    hospital for two or more days within 90 days of
    the infection resided in a nursing home or LTC
    facility received recent IV abx, chemotherapy,
    or wound care within the past 30 days of the
    current infection or attended a hospital or
    hemodialysis clinic
  • Guidelines for the Management of Adults with HAP,
    VAP, and HCAP. American Thoracic Society, 2005

7
Pathogenesis
  • Inhalation, aspiration and hematogenous spread
    are the 3 main mechanisms by which bacteria
    reaches the lungs
  • Primary inhalation when organisms bypass normal
    respiratory defense mechanisms or when the Pt
    inhales aerobic GN organisms that colonize the
    upper respiratory tract or respiratory support
    equipment

8
Pathogenesis
  • Aspiration occurs when the Pt aspirates
    colonized upper respiratory tract secretions
  • Stomach reservoir of GNR that can ascend,
    colonizing the respiratory tract.
  • Hematogenous originate from a distant source and
    reach the lungs via the blood stream.

9
Pathogens
  • CAP usually caused by a single organism
  • Even with extensive diagnostic testing, most
    investigators cannot identify a specific etiology
    for CAP in 50 of patients.
  • In those identified, S. pneumo is causative
    pathogen 60-70 of the time

10
Streptococcus pneumonia
  • Most common cause of CAP
  • Gram positive diplococci
  • Typical symptoms (e.g. malaise, shaking chills,
    fever, rusty sputum, pleuritic hest pain, cough)
  • Lobar infiltrate on CXR
  • Suppressed host
  • 25 bacteremic

11
Atypical Pneumonia
Pneumonia
  • 2 cause (especially in younger population)
  • Commonly associated with milder Sxs subacute
    onset, non-productive cough, no focal infiltrate
    on CXR
  • Mycoplasma younger Pts, extra-pulm Sxs
    (anemia, rashes), headache, sore throat
  • Chlamydia year round, URI Sx, sore throat
  • Legionella higher mortality rate, water-borne
    outbreaks, hyponatremia, diarrhea

12
Viral Pneumonia
  • More common cause in children
  • RSV, influenza, parainfluenza
  • Influenza most important viral cause in adults,
    especially during winter months
  • Post-influenza pneumonia (secondary bacterial
    infection)
  • S. pneumo, Staph aureus

13
Other bacteria
  • Anaerobes
  • Aspiration-prone Pt, putrid sputum, dental
    disease
  • Gram negative
  • Klebsiella - alcoholics
  • Branhamella catarrhalis - sinus disease, otitis,
    COPD
  • H. influenza
  • Staphylococcus aureus
  • IVDU, skin disease, foreign bodies (catheters,
    prosthetic joints) prior viral pneumonia

14
Diagnosis and Management
15
Guidelines
  • American Thoracic Society
  • Guidelines for the Management of Adults with CA
    (2001)
  • Infectious Diseases Society of America
  • Update of Practice Guidelines for the Management
    of CAP in Immunocompetent adults (2003)
  • ATS and IDSA joint effort
  • IDSA/ATS Consensus Guidelines on the Management
    of CAP in Adults (March 2007)

16
Guidelines
  • 2001 ATS 2003 IDSA Guideline Update
  • Expert panels
  • Evidence-based recommendations
  • Recommend patient stratification to identify
    likely pathogens and suggested empiric abx
  • Site of care
  • Presence of cardiopulmonary disease
  • Presence of modifying factors

17
Clinical Diagnosis
  • Suggestive signs and symptoms
  • CXR or other imaging technique
  • Microbiologic testing

18
Signs and Symptoms
  • Fever or hypothermia
  • Cough with or without sputum, hemoptysis
  • Pleuritic chest pain
  • Myalgia, malaise, fatigue
  • GI symptoms
  • Dyspnea
  • Rales, rhonchi, wheezing
  • Egophony, bronchial breath sounds
  • Dullness to percussion
  • Atypical Sxs in older patients

19
Clinical Diagnosis CXR
  • Demonstrable infiltrate by CXR or other imaging
    technique
  • Establish Dx and presence of complications
    (pleural effusion, multilobar disease)
  • May not be possible in some outpatient settings
  • CXR classically thought of as the gold standard

20
Infiltrate Patterns
21
Clinical Diagnosis Recommended testing
  • Outpatient CXR, sputum Cx and Gram stain not
    required
  • Inpatient CXR, Pox or ABG, chemistry, CBC, two
    sets of blood Cxs
  • If suspect drug-resistant pathogen or organism
    not covered by usual empiric abx, obtain sputum
    Cx and Gram stain.
  • Severe CAP Legionella urinary antigen, consider
    bronchoscopy to identify pathogen

22
Clinical Diagnosis
  • Assess overall clinical picture
  • PORT Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI)
  • Aids in assessment of mortality risk and
    disposition
  • Age, gender, NH, co-morbidities, physical exam
    lab/radiographic findings

23
IDSA Outpt Management in Previously Healthy Pt
  • Organisms S. pneumo, Mycoplasma, viral,
    Chlamydia pneumo, H. flu
  • Recommended abx
  • Advanced generation macrolide (azithro or
    clarithro) or doxycycline
  • If abx within past 3 months
  • Respiratory quinolone (moxi-, levo-, gemi-), OR
  • Advanced macrolide amoxicillin, OR
  • Advanced macrolide amoxicillin-clavulanate

24
IDSA Outpt Management in Pt with comorbidities
  • Comorbidities cardiopulmonary dz or
    immunocompromised state
  • Organisms S. pneumo, viral, H. flu, aerobic GN
    rods, S. aureus
  • Recommended Abx
  • Respiratory quinolone, OR advanced macrolide
  • Recent Abx
  • Respiratory quinolone OR
  • Advanced macrolide beta-lactam

25
IDSA Inpt Management-Medical Ward
  • Organisms all of the above plus polymicrobial
    infections (/- anaerobes), Legionella
  • Recommended Parenteral Abx
  • Respiratory fluoroquinolone, OR
  • Advanced macrolide plus a beta-lactam
  • Recent Abx
  • As above. Regimen selected will depend on nature
    of recent antibiotic therapy.

26
IDSA Inpt Management-Severe/ICU
  • One of two major criteria
  • Mechanical ventilation
  • Septic shock, OR
  • Two of three minor criteria
  • SBP90mmHg,
  • Multilobar disease
  • PaO2/FIO2 ratio
  • Organisms S. pneumo, Legionella, GN, Mycoplasma,
    viral, ?Pseudomonas

27
IDSA Inpt Management Severe/ICU
  • No risk for Pseudomonas
  • IV beta-lactam plus either
  • IV macrolide, OR IV fluoroquinolone
  • Risk for Pseudomonas
  • Double therapy selected IV antipseudomonal
    beta-lactam (cefepine, imipenem, meropenem,
    piperacillin/tazobactam), plus
  • IV antipseudomonal quinolone
  • -OR-
  • Triple therapy selected IV antipseudomonal
    beta-lactam plus
  • IV aminoglycoside plus either
  • IV macrolide, OR IV antipseudomonal quinolone

28
Switch to Oral Therapy
  • Four criteria
  • Improvement in cough and dyspnea
  • Afebrile on two occasions 8 h apart
  • WBC decreasing
  • Functioning GI tract with adequate oral intake
  • If overall clinical picture is otherwise
    favorable, can can switch to oral therapy while
    still febrile.

29
Management of Poor Responders
  • Consider non-infectious illnesses
  • Consider less common pathogens
  • Consider serologic testing
  • Broaden antibiotic therapy
  • Consider bronchoscopy

30
Prevention
  • Smoking cessation
  • Vaccination per ACIP recommendations
  • Influenza
  • Inactivated vaccine for people 50 yo, those at
    risk for influenza compolications, household
    contacts of high-risk persons and healthcare
    workers
  • Intranasal live, attenuated vaccine 5-49yo
    without chronic underlying dz
  • Pneumococcal
  • Immunocompetent 65 yo, chronic illness and
    immunocompromised 64 yo

31
Pneumonia in Children Dx
  • Symptoms
  • Infants non-specific manifestations
  • Fever, poor feeding, irritability, vomiting,
    diarrhea, URI Sx, cough, respiratory distress
  • Older children more specific
  • Fever, cough, chest pain, tachypnea, tachycardia,
    grunting, nasal flaring, retracting. Cyanosis
    usually very late.
  • Signs/Physical exam
  • RR 60 for all ages
  • Hypoxia
  • Rales, wheezes, crackles, coarse breath sounds

32
Pneumonia in Children Pathogens
  • 0-4 wks GBS, GN enterics, Listeria
  • 4-12 wks C. trachomatis, GBS, GN enterics,
    Listeria, viral (RSV/parainfluenza), B. pertussis
  • 3 mos-4 yrs Viral, S. pneumo, H. influenza, M.
    catarrhalis, Grp A Strep, Mycoplasma
  • 5yrs Mycoplasma (5-15yrs), C. pneumo, S.
    pneumo, viral

33
Pneumonia in the Elderly
  • Prevention important
  • Presentation can be subtle
  • Antibiotic choice in CAP is same as other adults
  • Healthcare associated pneumonia
  • Consider S. aureus (skin wounds) and GN bacteria
    (aspiration)
  • Pneumonia in Older Residents of Long-term Care
    Facilities. AFP 2004 70 1495-1500.

34
Pneumonia in Immunocompromised Pts
  • Smokers, alcoholics, bedridden,
    immuno-compromised, elderly
  • Common still common
  • S. pneumo
  • Mycoplasma
  • Pneumocystis Carinii Pneumonia
  • P. jirovecii
  • Fever, dyspnea, non-prod cough (triad 50),
    insidious onset in AIDS, acute in other
    immunocompromised Pts
  • CXR bilateral interstitial infiltrates
  • Steroids for hypoxia
  • TMP-SMZ still first line

35
New Guideline
36
IDSA/ATS 2007 Guideline
  • Hospital Admission Decision
  • CURB-65 criteria (confusion, uremia, RR, low BP,
    age 65 yrs or greater) or PSI can be used to ID
    candidates for outpt management
  • Diagnostic Testing
  • Acknowledges the low yield and infrequent
    positive impact on clinical care
  • Outpt testing for etiologic Dx remain optional
  • Inpt testing for etiologic Dx recommended for
    specific indications
  • Antimicrobial therapy essentially unchanged

37
Summary
  • Use overall clinical presentation to guide
    therapy
  • The admission decision is an art of medicine
    decision
  • Use risk factors and guidelines to assist with
    clinical judgement

38
References
  • American Thoracic Society. Guidelines for the
    Management of Adults with Community-acquired
    Pneumonia. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2001 Vol.
    1631730-1754.
  • Mandell LA, Bartlett JG, Dowell SF, File TM Jr,
    Musher DM, Whitney C. Update of practice
    guidelines for the management of
    community-acquired pneumonia in immunocompetent
    adults. Clin Infect Dis 2003 Dec
    137(11)1405-33.
  • Mandell LA, Wunderink RG, Anzueto A, Bartlett
    JG, Campbell GD, Dean NC, Dowell SF, File TM Jr,
    Musher DM, Niederman MS, Torres A, Whitney CG.
    Infectious Diseases Society of America/American
    Thoracic Society consensus guidelines on the
    management of community-acquired pneumonia in
    adults. Clin Infect Dis 2007 Mar 144 Suppl
    2S27-72.
  • Arch Ped Adol Med 1995 149 283-7.
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