101. The Challenging Diagnosis of Non-Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Non-Mechanically Ventilated Subjects: Value of Microbiological Investigation.
- Author
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Messika, Jonathan, Stoclin, Annabelle, Bouvard, Eric, Fulgencio, Jean-Pierre, Ridel, Christophe, Muresan, Ioan-Paul, Boffa, Jean-Jacques, Bachmeyer, Claude, Denis, Michel, Gounant, Valérie, Esteso, Adoracion, Loi, Valeria, Verdet, Charlotte, Prigent, Hélène, Parrot, Antoine, and Fartoukh, Muriel
- Subjects
PNEUMONIA diagnosis ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,CHI-squared test ,CROSS infection ,INTENSIVE care units ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MICROBIAL sensitivity tests ,PNEUMONIA ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis ,METHICILLIN-resistant staphylococcus aureus ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MANN Whitney U Test ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Early recognition and an attempt at obtaining microbiological documentation are recommended in patients with non-community-acquired pneumonia (NCAP), whether hospital-acquired (HAP) or health care-associated (HCAP). We aimed to characterize the clinical features and microbial etiologies of NCAP to assess the impact of microbiological investigation on their management. METHODS: This was a prospective 1-y study in a university hospital with 141 non-mechanically ventilated subjects suspected of having HAP (n = 110) or HCAP (n = 31). RESULTS: Clinical criteria alone poorly identified pneumonia (misdiagnosis in 50% of cases). Microbiological confirmation was achievable in 80 subjects (57%). Among 79 microorganisms isolated, 28 were multidrug-resistant aerobic Gram-negative bacilli and group HI Enterobacteriaceae and 6 were methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Multidrug-resistant aerobic Gram-negative bacilli accounted for one third of the microorganisms in early-onset HAP and for 50% in late-onset HAP. Methicillin-resistant S. aureus was most often recovered from subjects with HCAP. Inappropriate empirical antibiotics were administered to 36% of subjects with confirmed pneumonia. Forty subjects were admitted to the ICU, 13 (33%) of whom died. Overall, 39 subjects (28%) died in the hospital. CONCLUSIONS: Integrating the microbiological investigation in the complex clinical diagnostic workup of patients suspected of having NCAP is mandatory. Respiratory tract specimens should be obtained whenever possible for appropriate management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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