Antimicrobial treatment of hospital-acquired pneumonia

2006 ◽  
pp. 673-682
Critical Care ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Philippe Guerci ◽  
◽  
Hugo Bellut ◽  
Mokhtar Mokhtari ◽  
Julie Gaudefroy ◽  
...  

Abstract Background There is little descriptive data on Stenotrophomonas maltophilia hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) in critically ill patients. The optimal modalities of antimicrobial therapy remain to be determined. Our objective was to describe the epidemiology and prognostic factors associated with S. maltophilia pneumonia, focusing on antimicrobial therapy. Methods This nationwide retrospective study included all patients admitted to 25 French mixed intensive care units between 2012 and 2017 with hospital-acquired S. maltophilia HAP during intensive care unit stay. Primary endpoint was time to in-hospital death. Secondary endpoints included microbiologic effectiveness and antimicrobial therapeutic modalities such as delay to appropriate antimicrobial treatment, mono versus combination therapy, and duration of antimicrobial therapy. Results Of the 282 patients included, 84% were intubated at S. maltophilia HAP diagnosis for duration of 11 [5–18] days. The Simplified Acute Physiology Score II was 47 [36–63], and the in-hospital mortality was 49.7%. Underlying chronic pulmonary comorbidities were present in 14.1% of cases. Empirical antimicrobial therapy was considered effective on S. maltophilia according to susceptibility patterns in only 30% of cases. Delay to appropriate antimicrobial treatment had, however, no significant impact on the primary endpoint. Survival analysis did not show any benefit from combination antimicrobial therapy (HR = 1.27, 95%CI [0.88; 1.83], p = 0.20) or prolonged antimicrobial therapy for more than 7 days (HR = 1.06, 95%CI [0.6; 1.86], p = 0.84). No differences were noted in in-hospital death irrespective of an appropriate and timely empiric antimicrobial therapy between mono- versus polymicrobial S. maltophilia HAP (p = 0.273). The duration of ventilation prior to S. maltophilia HAP diagnosis and ICU length of stay were shorter in patients with monomicrobial S. maltophilia HAP (p = 0.031 and p = 0.034 respectively). Conclusions S. maltophilia HAP occurred in severe, long-stay intensive care patients who mainly required prolonged invasive ventilation. Empirical antimicrobial therapy was barely effective while antimicrobial treatment modalities had no significant impact on hospital survival. Trial registration clinicaltrials.gov, NCT03506191


2006 ◽  
pp. 653-662
Author(s):  
Jean Chastre ◽  
Charles Luyt ◽  
Alain Combes

2001 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 255-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael S Miletin ◽  
Charles K Chan

BACKGROUND: Several practice guidelines for the empirical antimicrobial treatment of hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) have been developed, but the acceptance and use of such guidelines are unknown.OBJECTIVE: To assess physicians' use of empirical HAP guidelines published by the American Thoracic Society (ATS) and by The University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario.DESIGN: A retrospective assembly and chart review.SETTING: A university teaching hospital.PATIENTS: One hundred fifteen consecutive patients who had been diagnosed with pneumonia more than 48 h after admission to hospital over a 10-month period.RESULTS: The charts of 115 patients were reviewed. Seventy-five patients (65%) were treated empirically. Forty patients (35%) were treated based on microbiological data that were available before the initiation of antibiotics. Patients who received nonempirical treatment for HAP had a significantly greater acuity of illness than the empirically treated group. Thirty-seven patients (49%) who received empirical therapy were treated according to either ATS or hospital guidelines for HAP. The use of guideline-concordant antimicrobial therapy had no measurable effect on in-hospital mortality (eight of 37 patients [21.6%] versus seven of 38 patients [18.4%], P=0.96) or median length of stay (19 days versus 21 days, P=0.30). Patients whose treatment did not follow guideline recommendations tended to receive appropriate antimicrobial coverage more often than did those patients whose treatment was guideline concordant (15 of 18 patients [83%] versus six of 11 patients [55%], P=0.49).CONCLUSIONS: Institutional and ATS guidelines for the empirical treatment of HAP are less widely used than would be predicted by chance at The University Health Network. The clinical utility of these guidelines remains to be proven.


2008 ◽  
Vol 52 (12) ◽  
pp. 4388-4399 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris M. Pillar ◽  
Mohana K. Torres ◽  
Nina P. Brown ◽  
Dineshchandra Shah ◽  
Daniel F. Sahm

ABSTRACT Doripenem, a 1β-methylcarbapenem, is a broad-spectrum antibiotic approved for the treatment of complicated urinary tract and complicated intra-abdominal infections. An indication for hospital-acquired pneumonia including ventilator-associated pneumonia is pending. The current study examined the activity of doripenem against recent clinical isolates for the purposes of its ongoing clinical development and future longitudinal analysis. Doripenem and comparators were tested against 12,581 U.S. clinical isolates collected between 2005 and 2006 including isolates of Staphylococcus aureus, coagulase-negative staphylococci, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Acinetobacter spp. MICs (μg/ml) were established by broth microdilution. By MIC90, doripenem was comparable to imipenem and meropenem in activity against S. aureus (methicillin susceptible, 0.06; resistant, 8) and S. pneumoniae (penicillin susceptible, ≤0.015; resistant, 1). Against ceftazidime-susceptible Enterobacteriaceae, the MIC90 of doripenem (0.12) was comparable to that of meropenem (0.12) and superior to that of imipenem (2), though susceptibility of isolates exceeded 99% for all evaluated carbapenems. The activity of doripenem was not notably altered against ceftazidime-nonsusceptible or extended-spectrum β-lactamase screen-positive Enterobacteriaceae. Doripenem was the most potent carbapenem tested against P. aeruginosa (MIC90/% susceptibility [%S]: ceftazidime susceptible = 2/92%S, nonsusceptible = 16/61%S; imipenem susceptible = 1/98.5%S, nonsusceptible = 8/56%S). Against imipenem-susceptible Acinetobacter spp., doripenem (MIC90 = 2, 89.1%S) was twice as active by MIC90 as were imipenem and meropenem. Overall, doripenem potency was comparable to those of meropenem and imipenem against gram-positive cocci and doripenem was equal or superior in activity to meropenem and imipenem against Enterobacteriaceae, including β-lactam-nonsusceptible isolates. Doripenem was the most active carbapenem tested against P. aeruginosa regardless of β-lactam resistance.


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