Title: PNEUMONIA
1PNEUMONIA
- Tasbirul Islam MD, FCCP, MRCP (UK)
- Division of Pulmonary Critical care
- IU Arnett hospital
- Adjunct Clinical Assistant Professor
- Indiana University School of Medicine
2Objectives
- Diagnosis and assessment of pneumonia.
- Discuss the different scoring system for
assessing severe pneumonia. - Discuss the therapy principles.
3Epidemiology and Impact
- Approximately 4 million adults develop CAP
annually in the USA. - 1.1 Million hospitalizations per year
- Cost 21 billion
- Mortality from severe CAP is high worldwide, with
pneumonia/influenza as the eighth leading cause
of death in the USA, accounting for 0.3 of
deaths in 2004. -
- National Center for Health Statistics. Health
Statistics, 2006. www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats - File and Tan Curr Opin Pul Med 389-97,
1997
4Fine et. al., JAMA 1996 275134
5Community Acquired Pneumonia
Mortality
in 1000s
6Case 1
- 65 y/o male smoker has 2 days of chills, dyspnea,
and purulent sputum. He has no risk factors for
HIV, donates blood 3x/year (most recently one
month ago) and does not take any medications. T
38.1, BP 110/60, HR 95, RR 20, SaO2 89
RA. Examination shows no abnormalities. CXR is
read as minimal streaking at lung bases,
atelectasis vs. early pneumonia - Does he have pneumonia?
- Should I treat with antibiotics?
-
7Does this patient have pneumonia?
Sensitivity Specificity
Fever/chills 85
Dyspnea 70
Purulent sputum 50
Any of above 70 90 40 50
- Hx
- PE VS most useful in predicting severity
- CXR is gold standard - may be normal in up to 7
on admission assume pneumonia present if
convincing hx and focal PE - Suspected pneumonia with neg CXR consider f/u
CXR or CT (more sensitive)
8Case 1
- 65 y/o male smoker has 2 days of chills, dyspnea,
and purulent sputum. He has no risk factors for
HIV, donates blood 3x/year (most recently one
month ago) and does not take any medications. T
38.1, BP 110/60, HR 95, RR 20, SaO2 89
RA. Examination shows no abnormalities. CXR is
read as minimal streaking at lung bases,
atelectasis vs. early pneumonia - Does he have pneumonia? Probably
- Should I treat with antibiotics?
Probably -
9Thinking about pneumonia 4 steps
- Put into initial clinical classification
- Decide site of care
- Tests for etiology
- Initial empiric therapy
10Step 1Initial clinical classification
- Major immunodeficiency
- Tuberculosis (suspected or established)
- Relatively normal hosts without TB (location at
time of infection) - Community-acquired (CAP)
- Healthcare-associated (HCAP)
- Hospital acquired (HAP)
- ventilator-acquired (VAP)
11Pneumonia
- HAP Hospital-acquired pneumonia
- 48 h from admission (early within 4 days of
admission and late after 4 days of admission). - VAP Ventilator-associated pneumonia
- 48 h from endotracheal intubation
- HCAP Healthcare-associated pneumonia
- Long-term care facility (NH), hemodialysis,
outpatient chemo, wound care, etc. - CAP Community-acquired pneumonia
- Outside of hospital or extended-care facility
12Case 1
- The patient has never been hospitalized, resides
at home, does not take dialysis, has not received
chemotherapy. - He has CAP
13Case 2
- 55 y/o homeless man from Mexico has 2 days of
chills, night sweats, dyspnea, and purulent
sputum without hemoptysis. He has not lost
weight. He has no risk factors for HIV, takes no
medications, and is not diabetic. Exam reveals T
38.1, BP 110/60, HR 95, RR 20, SaO2 89
RA, crackles at the right base. - Should I order airborne isolation?
14When to suspect TB
- If two or more sxs
- Hemoptysis
- Cough gt 2 weeks
- Night sweats
- Wt loss gt 10 in 3 mos
- If suspicious CXR (any of these)
- Upper lobe infiltrates
- Miliary pattern
- Cavitary lesions
- Nodular infiltrate
- Response to suspected TB
- Order airborn isolation and CXR
- Order AFB smears, cultures (does not have to be
qAM!)
15Case 2
- 55 y/o homeless man from Mexico has 2 days of
chills, night sweats, dyspnea, and purulent
sputum without hemoptysis. He has not lost
weight. He has no risk factors for HIV, takes no
medications, and is not diabetic. Exam reveals T
38.1, BP 110/60, HR 95, RR 20, SaO2 89
RA, crackles at the right base. - Order isolation, get CXR and AFB smear.
16Thinking about pneumonia 4 steps
- Put into initial clinical classification
- Decide site of care
- Tests for etiology
- Initial empiric therapy
17Case 3
- 65 y/o male smoker has 2 days of chills, dyspnea,
purulent sputum. No significant PMHx. He has
felt and eaten poorly. T 38.1, BP 110/60, HR
95, RR 20, SaO2 89 RA, crackles at the
right apex. He is not confused. WBC 15K, H/H
14.5/42, Na 128, K 3.5, Cl 105, CO2 20.
BUN/creat 32/1.4. CXR shows RUL infiltrate. - Can I send this patient home?
18Hospitalize or outpatient?
- Has a direct bearing on location and
- intensity of lab evaluation, antibiotic
- therapy and costs.
- Single episode CAP TX inpatient 7500
- gt20 fold higher than cost of outpatient
- 20 patients with pneumonia hospitalized.
19Who should be considered for hospitaladmission?
- Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI)
- The British Thoracic Society CURB-65
- SMART-COP
- PIRO score
- Modified ATS criteria
- IDS / ATS guidelines
20Pneumonia Severity Index PSI
Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI)
Fine et al N Engl J Med 1997336243-250
21CURB-65
22CURB 65
23CRB-65
- CRB-65 was more sensitive (1.00 vs. 0.80) and had
better LR- (0.00 vs. 0.41), and NPV (1.00 vs.
0.92). - CURB-65 had better specificity (0.48 vs. 0.21),
LR (1.54 vs. 1.26), and PPV (0.23 vs. 0.20). - Crit Care. 2013 17(Suppl 3) P39.
24CURB-65 vs CRB-65
25SMART-COP
- Low Systolic blood pressure 2 points
- Multilobar chest radiography involvement 1
point, - Low Albumin level 1 point,
- High Respiratory rate 1 point,
- Tachycardia 1 point,
- Confusion 1 point,
- Poor Oxygenation 2 points, and
- Low arterial pH 2 points
2642/50 (84) patients who died had SMART-COP scores
3 points
27SMART-COP score
- A SMART-COP score of gtor3 points identified 92
of patients who received IRVS, Sensitivities of
PSI and CURB-65 for identifying the need for IRVS
were 74 and 39, respectively. - Charles PG, et al Australian
Community-AcqGrayson ML SMART-COP a tool for
predicting the need for intensive respiratory or
vasopressor support in community-acquired
pneumonia. Clin Infect Dis 2008, 47375-384.
uired Pneumonia Study Collaboration,
28PIRO system
- The elements of the PIRO concept
- Predisposition (chronic illness, age, and
comorbidities) - Insult (injury, bacteremia, endotoxin)
- Response (neutropenia, hypoxemia, hypotension)
- Organ dysfunction
29(No Transcript)
30Length of stay in the ICU and mechanical
ventilation days , increased significantly Accordi
ng to level of risk defined by the PIRO score
31Considering the observed mortality for each PIRO
score the patients were stratified in four levels
of risk a) Low, 02 points b) Mild, 3
points c) high, 4 points d) Very high, 58
points
When the patients were distributed according PIRO
scoring, the mortality rate increased
significantly (p 0.001)
32Who should be considered for admission tothe
intensive care unit?
Infectious Diseases Society of America/American
Thoracic Society guidelines for intensive care
unit admission
- Major criteria
- Invasive mechanical ventilation
- Septic shock with the need for vasopressors
- Minor criteria
- Respiratory rate 30 breaths/minute
- PaO2/FiO2 ratio 250
- Multilobar infiltrates
- New onset confusion/disorientation
- Uremia (BUN level 20 mg/dl)
- Leukopenia (WBC count lt4,000 cells/mm3)
- Thrombocytopenia (platelets lt100,000 cells/mm3)
- Hypothermia (core temperature lt36C)
- Hypotension requiring aggressive fluid
resuscitation
1 major or 3 minor criteria for ICU admission.
33Modified ATS Criteria For Severe CAP
- Major Criteria
- --Need For Mechanical Ventilation
- --Presence of Severe Sepsis
- Minor Criteria
- --Systolic Blood Pressu ure lt 90 mmHg
- --PaO2/FIO2 lt 250
- --Multilobar Disease
-
- 1 Major or 2 Minor Treatment in an ICU
- Ewig et al Am J Respir Crit Care Med
19981581102-1108
34Risk factors for Severe Pneumonia
- Alcoholism
- COPD
- Immunosuppression
- Heart Disease
- Institutionalization
- Age gt 70 Yrs
- Elderly ? Likelihood Of Co Morbid Diseases
- Inhaled Steroids / PPI Use
35Physical findings associated with increase
mortality
- Respiratory rate gt 30
- Diastolic blood pressure lt 60 mm Hg or systolic
blood pressure lt 90 mm Hg - Pulse gt125
- Temp lt35 or gt40 C (lt95F or gt104F)
- Confusion or decreased LOC
36Lab and X-ray associated withincreased mortality
- WBC lt4 or gt30 x 10 (9)
- PaO² lt60 or PaCO² gt50 room air
- BUN gt20
- Chest x-ray multi lobular, pleural effusion,
- presence of a cavity.
- HCT lt30 or Hgb lt9
- Arterial ph lt7.35
- Evidence of sepsis
- ARRD 19931481418 NEJM 1997336243 Clin
Infect Dis 200744S27
37When is the ICU Used in CAP?
- National database in UK of 172 ICUs with 17,869
CAP cases (5.9 of all ICU admits) - 59 admitted within first 2 days, 21.5 days 2-7,
19.5 gt 7 days. - 54.6 mechanically ventilated on admission to ICU
- Mortality rate in ICU 34.9, 49.4 in hospital
- 46.3 mortality if admit in first 2 days
- 50.4 if admit day 2-7, 57.6 if after day 7 (
plt0.001)
- Woodhead et al. Critical Care 2006 10 S1
38Case 3
- 65 y/o male smoker has 2 days of chills, dyspnea,
purulent sputum. No significant PMHx. He has
felt and eaten poorly. T 38.1, BP 110/60, HR
95, RR 20, SaO2 89 RA, crackles at the
right apex. He is not confused. WBC 15K, H/H
14.5/42, Na 128, K 3.5, Cl 105, CO2 20.
BUN/creat 32/1.4. CXR shows RUL infiltrate. - CURB 653
- Can I send this patient home?
NO
39Thinking about pneumonia 4 steps
- Put into initial clinical classification
- Decide site of care
- Tests for etiology
- Initial empiric therapy
40Pathogenesis
- Inhalation, aspiration and hematogenous spread
are the 3 main mechanisms by which bacteria
reaches the lungs
41Diagnosis of Pneumonia
- Chest radiograph is the most important diagnostic
tool. - Clinical presentation is not diagnostic of an
etiology. - Yield of pathogens from gram stain of adequate
expectorated sputum, blood culture, sputum
culture from patients with CAP 30-40. - Immunologic/serologic tests.
42Diagnostic Testing
- Chest X-Ray
- Careful Assessment of Disease Severity Risk
Factors - Hospitalized Patients
- Assessment of Oxygenation/Gas Exchange
- CBC, Chemistry, Blood Cultures
- If resistant or unusual organism
suspected - Sputum Gram Stain
- ? Serologic Studies
- Am J Respir Crit Care Med 20011631730-1754
43Diagnostic tests for etiology
- Why not etiologic tests for everyone?
- Outpt Get SaO2 Routine tests for etiology are
optional. - Inpt - Blood and sputum cultures recommended for
most (but not all) - ICU - blood and sputum cultures, and Legionella
and pneumococcal UAT
44(No Transcript)
45Community Acquired Pneumonia
Microbiology
- S. pneumoniae 20-60
- H. influenzae 3-10
- Chlamydia pneumoniae 4-6
- Mycoplasma pneumonaie 1-6
- Legionella spp. 2-8
- S. aureus 3-5
- Gram negative bacilli 3-5
- Viruses 2-13
40-60 - NO CAUSE IDENTIFIED 2-5 - TWO OR MORE
CAUSES
Bartlett. NEJM 19953331618-24
46Bacteriology of Severe CAP
- 89 patients with severe CAP 1996- 1998 , compared
to severe CAP 1984-1987
Legionel
PA
Ruiz et. al., Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1999
160923-929
47(No Transcript)
48 Sputum for diagnosis in CAP
- Sputum exam--good specimen available only
30 off time, 30 of patient on antibx - before spec obtained and 25 may have
- agents not identified from routine culture
- Criteria for good specimen is lt 10
- squamous cells and gt 25 WBC per low
- powered field--low sensitivity and
specificity -
- Murray PR, Mayo Clin Proc 197550339
Clin Infec Dis 199418501
49Review of Lung Anatomy
RUL
LUL
RML
LLL
Lingula
RLL
http//www.meddean.luc.edulumenMedEdGrossAnatomyth
orax0thor_lecthorax1.jpg
50RUL Pneumonia
51RML Pneumonia
52RLL Pneumonia
53LUL Pneumonia
54Lingular Pneumonia
55LLL Pneumonia
56Recently
(PCT) levels appears to be useful in order to
minimize this problem. The sensitivity and
specificity of PCT in bacterial infections were
found to be 92.6 and 97.5
Cantürk et al., Turk J Med Sci 2008 38 (2)
139-144
57Invasion by pathogenic bacteria
Bacterial toxins and cytokines
Stimulate PCT production in all paraynchymal cells
Adapted from Christ-Crain et al. 2005
58IFN-g
Decreases PCT production
Viral infection
59Diagnostic accuracy of PCT compared to other
biomarkers used in sepsis
Sensitivity 89 Specificity 94 NPV 90 PPV
94
- PCT levels accurately differentiate
sepsis from noninfectious inflammation - PCT has been demonstrated to be the best
marker for differentiating patients with sepsis
from those with systemic inflammatory reaction
not related to infectious cause
Simon L. et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2004
39206-217.
60PCT guidance in antibiotic usage Effects on
length of stay
- Effect of PCT-guided management in patients with
sepsis on ICU length of stay
Nobre V. et alAM Resp Crit Care Med 2008
177498-505
61PCT guidance in antibiotic usage has been shown
to significantly shorten the time patients need
to be on antibiotics
- KEY TAKEAWAY
- Tailoring of AB treatment using PCT to the
individual patient needs safely led to a
reduction of average treatment duration from 12
to 5 days with same outcome
Nobre V. et al AM Resp Crit Care Med 2008
177498-505
62Antibiotic Exposure in Patients Receiving
Antibiotic Therapy
PCTControl
All Patients (n 1359)
Community-acquired Pneumonia (n 925)
100
80
60
Patients Receiving Antibiotic Therapy,
40
20
0
0 1 2 5 7 9
11 gt13
0 1 2 5 7 9
11 gt13
Time After Study Inclusion, d
Time After Study Inclusion, d
No. of Patients PCT 506 484
410 306 207 138 72 46 Control
603 589 562 516 420 324 157
100
417 410 359 272 161 126 64
41461 453 444 428 361 292 146
91
Schuetz P et al. J Am Med Assoc.
2009302(10)1059-66.
63(No Transcript)
64- Antibiotics were started/ stopped based on a
predefined cut-off ranges of PCT value - Primary end point
- 28 and 60 days mortality
- No. of days without antibiotics
65- Recent reanalysis of the Community-Acquired
Pneumonia Intensive Care Unit (CAPUCI) study, in
which patients with severe CAP requiring ICU
admission were assessed, has suggested that
radiologic progression of pulmonary infiltrates
is a significant adverse prognostic feature. In
contrast, bacteremia levels appeared not to
affect patient outcomes. -
- Lisboa T, et al Community-Acquired
Pneumonia Intensive Care Units (CAPUCI) Study
Investigators Radiological progression of
pulmonary infiltrates predicts a worse prognosis
in severe community-acquired pneumonia than
bacteremia. Chest 2008
66- 3 patients with bronchiogenic
- carcinoma initially present with
- pneumonia.
- All patients over 40, all smokers or
- former smokers need follow up chest x-ray in
4-6 week.
67Thinking about pneumonia 4 steps
- Put into initial clinical classification
- Decide site of care
- Tests for etiology
- Initial empiric therapy
68Case 4
- 24 y/o previously healthy female has 2 days of
chills, dyspnea, purulent sputum. No
significant PMHx. T 38.1, BP 110/60, HR 95,
RR 20, SaO2 92 RA, crackles at the right
base. CBNC and Chem 7 normal. CXR early RLL
pneumonia - What antibiotics should I order?
69CAP management issues
- Causative pathogen frequently not found.
- Pneumococcal and atypical pathogen coverage
important CaMRSA - Treatment predominantly empiric.
- Give treatment quickly (lt4-8 hours).
- Increasing antibiotic resistance.
- Decision to hospitalize/discharge.
- Bartlett Clin Infect Dis 26811, 1998
70THERAPY PRINCIPLES
- Appropriate Matching antibiotic sensitivities of
the organism to the antibiotic used. - Alternative from a different class should be
selected. - Adequate includes appropriate PLUS correct dose,
penetration to site of infection, correct route
and combination therapy (if needed) - Need proper antibiotic dosing (normal renal
function) - Ciprofloxacin 400 mg q8h Levofloxacin 750 mg qD
- Imipenem 1 gm q 8H or 500 mg q 6hMeropenem 1 gm
q 6-8 h - Piperacillin/Tazobactam 4.5 gm q 6h
- Cefepime 2 gm q 8-12h
- Ceftazidime 2 gm q 8h
- Gentamicin or Tobramycin 7 mg/kg / day or
Amikacin 20 mg/kg/day - Linezolid 600 mg q 12 h
- Vancomycin 15 mg/kg q12h
71- Mortality in patients receiving concordant
therapy was 14 the excess mortality for
discordant therapy was 36. - Discordant therapy, multilobar involvement,
underlying COPD, and hospitalization during the
previous 12 weeks were independently associated
with death. -
-
- Lujan M, et al Prospective observational study
of bacteremic pneumococcal pneumonia effect of
discordant therapy on mortality. Crit Care Med
2004,32625-631.
72Antibiotic Timing in CAP and Mortality
Antibiotic First-Dose Timing and
30-Day Mortality Rates Houck et al Arch Intern
Med 2004 164 637-644
73Harm from the 4 Hour Rule
- Overdiagnosis and overtreatment may lead to
unnecessary C. difficile colitis - 15 cases C. diff. 12 given antibiotics for
pneumonia (new hospital CAP care plan) and 6 in
retrospect DID NOT HAVE - Polgreen et al. ICHE 2007 28 212-214
- 2003 IDSA guideline endorsed 4 hour rule. Compare
all patients with admit dx of CAP 2005 vs. 2003
(n510) - Antibiotics in 4 hours 66 vs. 54 (p0.007)
- Dx CAP with neg CXR 28 vs. 20 (p0.04)
- Final dx of CAP 59 vs. 76 (plt0.001)
- 2005 with more blood cultures, more total
antibiotics - Kanwar et al. Chest 2007 131 1865-1869
74OUTCOMES IN SEVERE CAPADEQUACY OF THERAPY
- Adequate therapy with 7 mortality vs. 60 with
inadequate therapy. Torres et al ARRD 1991 144
312 - 286 patients , mortality 28.5, 50 mechanical
ventilation. 194 effective initial therapy
(response at 72 hours), 92 ineffective therapy
INEFFECTIVE
LEROY ET AL INTENSIVE CARE MED 199521 24
75ATS guidelines Modifying Factorsfor penicillin
resistance and drug Resistant Pneumococci
- Age gt 65 yr
- ß Lactam Therapy within past 3 months
- Alcoholism
- Immune-Suppressive Illness
- Multiple Medical Co-morbbidities
- Exposure to Child in a Day Care Center
- Am J Respir Crit Care Med 20011631730-1754
76Risk for Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Structural Lung Disease (Bronchiectasis)
- Corticosteroid Therapy (gt10 mg Prednisone/day)
- Broad-Spectrum Antibiotic Therapy for gt 7 days in
past month - Malnutrition
- Am J Respir Crit Care Med 20011631730-1754
77Traditional Treatment Paradigm
Conservative start with workhorse antibiotics
Reserve more potent drugs for non-responders
78New Treatment Paradigm
Hit hard early with appropriate antibiotic(s)
Short Rx. Duration De-escalate where possible
79The Effect of the Traditional Approach
Inappropriate therapy ()
45
50
40
34
30
17
20
10
0
CAP
HAP
HAP on CAP
Kollef, et al. Chest 1999115462474
80New data Dont Wait for Results !
Tumbarello, et al. Antimicrob Agents Chemother
20075119871994
81New data The Speed of Delay ! (PSI Class 4 5)
Kumar, et al. Crit Care Med 20063415891596
82Empiric Rx of outpatient CAP
- Healthy and no antibiotics in past 3 months
- Macrolide OR doxycycline
- If cardiopulmonary dz, Beta-lactam rx in past 3
mos, alcoholism, immunosuppressive rx, or
exposure to child in day-care - Respiratory quinolone OR
- beta lactam (high dose amoxicillin or
Augmentin) macrolide or doxycycline - Duration of rx 5-7 days.
83Empiric Rx of inpatient CAP no special
considerations
- Inpatient Floor
- respiratory quinolone
- OR
- (ceftriaxone or ceftazidime) (azithro or doxy)
- ICU
- (ceftriaxone or ceftazidime) (IV azithro or
respiratory quinolone) - If PCN allergic use aztreonam respiratory
quinolone
84Empiric therapy of HCAP/HAP/VAP with MDR risk
factors
- Cefepime, Ceftazadime, Imipenam, or Zosyn
- PLUS
- Ciprofloxacin, Levofloxacin, or Aminoglycoside
- If MRSA concerns add linezolid or vancomycin.
-
85Aspiration
- When to use observed/suspected aspiration
fever or leucocytosis or infiltrate - Regimens
- Unasyn or Zosyn
- Augmentin or clindamycin
- Respiratory quinolone
86Duration of Therapy
- ? ? ? ? ? ?
- 5 -7 days - outpatients
- 7-10 days inpatients, S. pneumoniae
- 10-14 days Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, Legionella
- 14 days - chronic steroid users
Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1631730-54, 2001
87Case 3
- 65 y/o male smoker has 2 days of chills, dyspnea,
purulent sputum. No significant PMHx. He has
felt and eaten poorly. T 38.1, BP 110/60, HR
95, RR 20, SaO2 89 RA, crackles at the
right base. He is not confused. WBC 15K, H/H
14.5/42, Na 128, K 3.5, Cl 105, CO2 20.
BUN/creat 32/1.4. CXR shows RUL infiltrate - What antibiotics do you order?
- CURB 653
- As Inpatient floor
-
88Case 4
- 24 y/o previously healthy female has 2 days of
chills, dyspnea, purulent sputum. No
significant PMHx. T 38.1, BP 110/60, HR 95,
RR 20, SaO2 92 RA, crackles at the right
base. CBNC and Chem 7 normal. CXR early RLL
pneumonia - What antibiotics should I order?
- CURB 650
- As outpatient (No risk factors)
-
89Pneumonia, approach to thenonresponder with CAP
- 6 to 15 of CAP patients may not respond to
initial treatment - Reassess diagnosis and therapy
- ? empyema, resistant organism, other complication
- ? noninfectious, i.e. cancer, pulm embolus, CHF,
vasculitis, drug fever, ARDS, BOOP... - Consider bronchoscopy, further diagnostic
testing, escalation or change of therapy. - Definition varies from no change in 3 days to 4
weeks. - Menendez R, Chest 20071321348
90Case 3
- 65 y/o male 2 days ago with RUL pneumonia and
treated with ceftriaxone and azithromycin. On
rounds is feeling better, eating, not confused. T
37.9, HR 102, BP 105/75, RR 12, SaO2
88 on room air - When I can I switch to an oral regimen. and what
regimen? - When can the pt go home?
91When to switch IV to PO?
- Improvement in cough, dyspnea
- Afebrile lt100 F on two occasions 8 hrs
- apart
- WBC decreasing
- Functioning GI tract with adequate oral
- intake
92Discharge Criteria
- During 24 H before discharge, no more than 1
following - Temp gt 37.8
- Pulse gt100
- RRgt24
- Systolic B/P lt90
- O2 sat lt90
- Inability maintain oral intake
- Altered mental status
-
- Arch Intern Med 19951551273 JAMA
19982791452 Clin Infect Dis 2004391783
93Case 3
- 65 y/o male 2 days ago with RUL pneumonia and
treated with ceftriaxone and azithromycin. On
rounds is feeling better, eating, not confused. T
37.9, HR 102, BP 105/75, RR 12, SaO2
90 on room air. - Swith to oral med and discharge home.
94Prevention
- Smoking cessation
- Vaccination per ACIP recommendations
- Influenza
- Inactivated vaccine for people gt50 yo, those at
risk for influenza compolications, household
contacts of high-risk persons and healthcare
workers - Intranasal live, attenuated vaccine 2-49yo
without chronic underlying dz - Pneumococcal (PCV 13 and PPSV 23)
- Immunocompetent 65 yo, chronic illness and
immunocompromised 64 yo
95QUIZ 1
- A 64-year-old female presents to the emergency
department from home with a two day history of
cough, fever, and dyspnea. She has a past medical
history of coronary artery disease with normal
left ventricular function, as well as a history
of chronic hepatitis C. On physical exam, BP
92/70, a HR 110, RR 32, and Temp 38.5. She is
alert and oriented. Laboratory testing reveals
normal electrolytes, hemoglobin, and arterial
blood gas, BUN 32, and a serum creatinine of 1.3.
CXR reveals a right middle lobe infiltrate
without apparent pleural effusion.
96What risk startification instrument will help to
decide out patient vs inpatient treatment
- CURB 65
- PSI
- SMART-COP
- PIRO
97Calculate the CURB 65 and decide about out
patient vs inpatient vs ICU eval
- CURB 6502
- Supervised outpatient or brief inpatient
treatment.
98QUIZ2
- 50 yr old male came to ED with cough, fever,
intermittent exertional chest pain and CXR showed
LLL infiltrate. CURB 65 0 and SpO2 85 on RA
99- Out patient antibiotic therapy
- Out patient Abx therapy along with brief home O2
- Consider inpatient therapy.
100QUIZ3
- 30 years old female came to ED with H/O SOB,
cough, fever. She is found to be confused and
vitals showed SBP 85/HR 100/RR 31/Temp 35.6/SpO2
92. Confusion and SBP improved with 3 L fluid.
Lab showed BUN 32/WBC 3000/CXR shower RLL/RUL
infiltrate. Now patient wants to go home.
101- Send the patient home with oral antibiotics as
she improved with fluid. - Admit the patient to the floor and initiate
macrolide. - Admit the patient to ICU and initiate IV
monotherapy. - Admit the patient to ICU and initiate IV dual
therapy.
102Who should be considered for admission tothe
intensive care unit?
Infectious Diseases Society of America/American
Thoracic Society guidelines for intensive care
unit admission
- Major criteria
- Invasive mechanical ventilation
- Septic shock with the need for vasopressors
- Minor criteria
- Respiratory rate 30 breaths/minute
- PaO2/FiO2 ratio 250
- Multilobar infiltrates
- New onset confusion/disorientation
- Uremia (BUN level 20 mg/dl)
- Leukopenia (WBC count lt4,000 cells/mm3)
- Thrombocytopenia (platelets lt100,000 cells/mm3)
- Hypothermia (core temperature lt36C)
- Hypotension requiring aggressive fluid
resuscitation
1 major or 3 minor criteria for ICU admission.
103QUIZ4
- 30 years old female came to ED with H/O SOB,
cough, fever. She is found to be confused and
vitals showed SBP 85/HR 100/RR 31/Temp 35.6/SpO2
92. Confusion and SBP improved with 3 L fluid.
Lab showed BUN 32/WBC 3000/CXR shower RLL/RUL
infiltrate.
104- Continue present Abx
- Change to IV macrolides
- Change to IV Ceftriaxone
- Change to IV Quinolones
- Change to IV Ceftriaxone and IV Quinolones.
- Change to IV Ceftriaxone and IV macrolides.
105QUIZ5
- 73 years old female admitted to medical floor
with a diagnosis of CAP and treated with IV
antibiotics.
106Which of the following would be recommended
- 10-14 days of Abx with dual coverage
- 5-7 days of IV Abx followed by oral ABx for a
total of 10-14 days. - Change to oral ABx once the patient is clinically
improved, afebrile and able to take PO med and
observe another 48-72 hrs after switch to PO med. - Minimum 5 days Resp quinolones or combination of
macrolide and beta lactam ABx and discontinue ABx
when patient is afebrile for 48-72 hrs. - Discharge the patient once stable on the same day
of switching PO med.
107(No Transcript)