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Follow-up protected specimen brushes to assess treatment in nosocomial pneumonia.

Authors :
Montravers P
Fagon JY
Chastre J
Lecso M
Dombret MC
Trouillet JL
Gibert C
Source :
The American review of respiratory disease [Am Rev Respir Dis] 1993 Jan; Vol. 147 (1), pp. 38-44.
Publication Year :
1993

Abstract

To prospectively determine the bacteriologic and clinical efficacy of antimicrobial therapy for nosocomial bacterial pneumonia selected based upon information provided by cultures of protected specimen brush (PSB) samples obtained during bronchoscopy, 76 consecutive patients with ventilator-associated pneumonia were studied using follow-up quantitative PSB cultures obtained after 3 days of treatment. Of the 173 microorganisms initially present in the PSB samples, only 11 (6%) were not eradicated by antimicrobial therapy, including three recovered at high (> or = 10(3) cfu/ml) concentrations. Thirty-two emerging pathogens, including nine at high concentrations, were also detected; 26 of them (81%) were resistant to the initial antibiotics administered. Of the 76 patients included in the study, cultures of follow-up PSB samples identified 51 in whom the infection site in the lung was completely sterilized, 16 with low-grade infection, and only nine with persistent high-grade infection. Analysis of clinical outcome within the 15 days after the initiation of antimicrobial therapy demonstrated clinical improvement in 62 of 67 (93%) patients in whom the site of infection was contained by treatment as compared with four of 9 (44%) patients with persistent high-grade infection (p < 0.01). These data suggest that appropriate antimicrobial therapy for ventilator-associated pneumonia results in the control of the initial infection in 88% of the patients. However, an early superinfection caused by multiresistant pathogens can occur in a small subset of these patients. When follow-up PSB cultures were negative, an improved outcome was noted.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0003-0805
Volume :
147
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The American review of respiratory disease
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
8420428
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm/147.1.38