Title: Antibiotics in Acute Respiratory Failure
1Antibiotics in Acute Respiratory Failure
- Robin J Green PhD
- Division of Paediatric Pulmonology
- University of Pretoria
2Definitions
- ALI- acute onset of impaired gas exchange
PaO2/FIO2 lt300 - ARDS- PaO2/FIO2 lt200
- Oxygenation index( MAP x FI02/Pao2)x100
3Acute Lung Injury
- CAP
- HIV-associated pneumonia
- HAP/VAP
- Viral lung disease
4Definition Community Acquired Pneumonia
- Acute infection (less than 14 days) acquired in
the community, of the lower respiratory tract,
leading to cough or difficulty breathing,
tachypnoea or chest-wall indrawing - Accounts for 30-40 of all hospital admissions
- Case fatality rate 15-28
Zar HJ, et al SAMJ 2005
5Causes Community Acquired Pneumonia
- Bacterial
- - Strep Pneumoniae
- - Haemophilus influenzae
- - Staph aureus
- - Moraxella catarrhalis
- Atypical bacteria
- - Mycoplasma pneumoniae
- - Chlamydaphila pneumoniae/trachomatis
- Viral
- - RSV
- - Human metapneumovirus
- - Parainfluenza
- - Adenovirus
- - Influenza
- - Rhinovirus
- - Measles virus
6Causes of Community Acquired Pneumonia
- In addition in HIV-infected children
- Gram-negative bacteria
- Staph aureus (including Community Acquired-MRSA)
- TB
- Fungi
7Organisms cultured Paediatric Ward Pretoria
Academic Hospital
8Treatment Community Acquired Pneumonia
- Antibiotis for all Amoxicillin (90mg/kg/day tds
5 days) (IV Ampicillin) - lt 2 months add aminoglycoside/cephalosporin
- gt 5 years add macrolide
- HIV - infection add aminoglycoside
- HIV - exposed lt 6 months add cotrimoxazole
- AIDS add cotrimoxazole
Zar HJ, et al SAMJ 2005
9HIV-infected children
- No evidence that PK/PD principles are different
to healthy children - All specimens showed resistance to
co-trimoxazole. - Savitree Chaloryoo International Journal of
Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology 1998 44103-107 - Brink A. Personnel communication
10PCP Pneumonia
- Diagnosis
- - Immune compromised
- - Respiratory distress and few crepitations
- - Interstitial pattern on CXR
- - LDH gt 500
- - PCR
113. Fluids in Acute Respiratory Distress
Syndrome/Acute Lung Injury
- NHLBI and ARDS net - FACTT trial
- Conservative fluid management strategy favoured
- Increase in ventilator free days and reduction in
ICU stay, lower OI, plateau pressure, PEEP,
higher PaO2/FIO2 - No increase rates of shock or renal failure
- Need to closely monitor electrolytes
-
Calfee CS, Matthay MA. Chest
2007131913-19
12Managing Severe PCP Pneumonia
- Lung protective strategies (low tidal volume,
high PEEP) - Fluid restriction
- TMX/SMX
- Oral steroids
- Treating CMV pneumonitis Ganciclovir
- Early introduction HAART
13Survival analysis, adjusted age and
hospitalHazard ratio 0.54, 95 CI(0.29-1.02), p
value 0.06
Hazard ratio 0.54 95 CI(0.29-1.02) p value 0.06
Terblanche A, et al. SAMJ 2008
14CMV Pneumonitis
- Diagnosis
- - CMV viral load gt 10 000 copies/ml - Blood
- CMV PCR NBBAL
- Treatment
- Ganciclovir (10mg/kg/dose BD)
- Duration 3 weeks after starting HAART
15Hospital Acquired Pneumonia
Definition
- HAP Pneumonia developing more than
48 hours after admission to
hospital - Ventilator Associated Pneumonia Nosocomial
infection occuring in patients receiving
mechanical ventilation
that is not present at the time of intubation
and develops more than 48
hours after initiation of ventilation
16Epidemiology
- Pneumonia 2nd most common nosocomial infection
- Accounts for 18 26 of nosocomial infections
- Children aged 2 12 months most affected
- 95 of nosocomial pneumonia occurs in ventilated
children
17Risk Factors
- Immunodeficiency
- Immunosuppression
- Neuromuscular blockage
- Septicaemia
- TPN
- Steroids
- H2-blockers
- Mechanical ventilation
- Re-intubation
- Transport while intubated
18Microbiology
- Early-onset VAP
- - Strep pneumoniae
- - Haemophilus influenzae
- - Moraxella catarrhalis
- Late-onset VAP (Resistant species)
- - Staph aureus
- - Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- - Lactose fermenting gram-negatives
19Organisms cultured PICU Pretoria Academic
Hospital
20Criteria for VAP for Infants Younger than 12
Months of AgeClinical Criteria / Radiographic
Criteria
- Worsening gas exchange with at least 3 of the
clinical criteria - Temperature instability without other recognized
cause - White blood cells lt4,000/mm3 or gt 15,000/mm3
and band forms gt 10 - New onset purulent sputum or change in the
character of sputum or increased respiratory
secretions - Apnea, tachypnea, increased work of breathing, or
grunting - Wheezing, rales, or rhonchi
- Cough
- Heart rate lt100 beats/min or gt170 beats/min
- plus radiographic criteria
- At least 2 serial chest x-rays with new or
progressive and persistent infiltrate,
consolidate, cavitation or pneumatocele that
develops gt48 hours after initiation of mechanical
ventilation
Wright ML, et al. Semin Pedaitr Infect Dis
20061758-64
21VAP - Prevention Strategies
- Head of bed elevation
- Daily sedation holidays
- Stress ulcer prophylaxis
- DVT prophylaxis
- Pneumococcal vaccination
- Change in ventilator circuits only when dirty
- Avoidance of re-intubation
- Orotracheal intubation
- Oropharyngeal toilet
22Management
- Antibiotic selection policies
- De-escillation
- Antibiotic rotation
- Regular microbiology for a
- Antibiotic STEWARDSHIP
23Dosage
- Correct antibiotic dosages and duration
- Correct antibiotic administration
- - Concentration dependent antibiotics
(Aminoglycosides, quinolones) single daily
concentration - - Time dependent antibiotics (B-lactams,
vancomycin, pip-taz, carbapenems, linezolid)
continuous infusion over 24 hours or multiple
dosings (3-4 hours for carbapenems)
24Duration
- No culture 3 5 days
- Positive culture 5-7 days.
- Seldom need 10 days
- Exceptions
- Staph 2-3 weeks
- - PCP 3 weeks
- - Fungal 2-3 weeks
25De-escillation
- If broad spectrum antibiotics or combinations
used downgrade with positive culture and
sensitivity - Vancomycin can be used alone
- Single antibiotics are usually equivalent to
combinations
26Decontaminate
- Hand washing the most effective startegy to
prevent resistance - All personnel and parents must hand wash
- Anti-inflammatory strategies of Macrolides this
strategy holds promise for the future
27Dont
- Use third generation cephalosporins routinely
(except meningitis) - Use inappropriate antibiotics
- Use a long course
- Use too low a dose
- Routinely combine antibiotics
- Routinely use probiotics
28Antibiotics for Extended Spectrum Beta-Lactamase
producers
- Carbapenem
- - Meropenem
- - Imipenem
- - Ertapenem (Invanz)
- Cefepime (Maxipime) in some cases
- Piperacillin/tazobactam (Tazocin)
- Never Ciprofloxacin/3rd Generation
Cephalosporins
29Risk factors for and outcomes of bloodstream
infection caused by ESBL-producing Escherichia
coli and Klebsiella species in childrenPaediatric
s 2005115 942-949
30Antibiotics for MRSA
- Vancomycin (highly protein bound better for
septicaemia) - Linezolid (Zyvoxid) better lung penetration
- Teicoplanin
31Bronchiolitis
32Viral Identification 2007 Pretoria Academic
Hospital
33Bronchiolitis in HIV positive children
- 12 of bronchiolitics at PAH are HIV positive
- Mean age 8 months old (vs 3 months in non
HIV-infected children) - No increase in numbers co-infected in more mild
disease
34Pearson correlation r 0.138
35Summary
- CAP Ampicillin /-
- HAP Meropenem /-
- PCP Bactrim oral steroids Ganciclovir
- Bronchiolitis nothing ?
- Using this policy and noting that all
HIV-infected children are offered ventilation if
required Mortality in PICU at PAH 18.7
36Aknowledgement
- Dr Refiloe Masekela
- Dr Omolemo Kitchin
- Dr Teshni Moodley
- Dr Sam Risenga
- Prof Max Klein