Pulmonary Infections
Pulmonary Infections
Pulmonary Infections
The two key decisions in initial empiric therapy are whether the patient has risk factors for
healthcare-associated pneumonia, in which case the antibiotic guidelines for adult
healthcare-associated pneumonia must be used. The second key factor that must be
considered is the immune status of the patient. Additional factors that must be considered are
the treatment site for the patient, the presence of modifying factors, and the presence of risk
factors for Pseudomonas and CA-MRSA. Infectious Diseases consultation should be considered
for any patients who are immunocompromised or at risk for resistant pathogens.
If the patient has any of the following characteristics, see the section for
Healthcare-Associated Pneumonia Empiric Therapy:
Hospitalization for 2 d or more in the preceding 90 d
Residence in a nursing home or a long-term care facility
Family member with multidrug-resistant pathogen
Immunosuppressive disease and/or therapy
Home wound care
Home infusion therapy
Chronic hemodialysis
Antimicrobial therapy within prior 90 d
In non-critically ill patients, switch to oral agents as soon as patient is clinically improving
and eating. IV therapy does not need to be continued until discharge. It is not necessary to
start all CAP patients on IV therapy if they can tolerate oral therapy. See Table on Empiric
PLUS
Azithromycin 500 mg PO/IV dailyIV (IV for the first 24 hours, patient can be
clinical stability. Levofloxacin should not be used routinely as step-down therapy for
pneumococcal pneumonia if the organism is susceptible to beta-lactams.
Legionella pneumophila: IV/PO azithromycin for 7-10 days OR levofloxacin for
10-21 days.
Haemophilus influenzae: doxycycline OR amoxicillin/clavulanate OR ceftriaxone
are preferred. Other options include cefpodoxime or levofloxacin.
Step-down (preferred)
Step-down (alternate)
Ceftriaxone PLUS
azithromycin
Azithromycin
Doxycycline
Levofloxacin IV
Levofloxacin PO
Azithromycin OR
doxycycline
Oral Agent
Dose
Duration (days)*
Amoxicillin
1 g PO TID
5-10
Azithromycin
500 mg PO daily
Cefpodoxime
200 mg PO BID
5-10
Doxycycline
100 mg PO BID
5-10
Levofloxacin
750 mg PO daily
*Treat for a minimum of 5 days (include therapy before oral switch). Therapy can be
stopped after the patient is afebrile for 48-72 hours and has no more than one of the
following signs and symptoms: HR > 100 bpm, RR > 24 breaths/min, BP < 90 mmHg, O2
sat < 90%, altered mental status. Therapy > 5 days without a clinical reason should be
avoided.
TREATMENT NOTES
Diagnosis
Immunocompetent patients MUST have an infiltrate on chest radiograph to meet
diagnostic criteria for pneumonia.
Sputum and blood cultures should be sent on all patients admitted to the hospital
BEFORE antibiotics are given.
Therapy should not be delayed if a sputum culture cannot be obtained.
The Legionella urine antigen is the test of choice for diagnosing legionella infection.
However, this test detects only L. pneumophila serogroup 1, which is responsible
for ~70-80% of infections. The test is sent to a referral laboratory with ~6 day
turn-around time.
HIV test in all patients, but especially if age < 55, severe CAP, homeless, or other
risk factors.
Indication
Blood
Culture
Sputum
Culture
Legionella
Urinary Antigen
Other
ICU admission
Xa
Cavitary infiltrates
Xb
Active alcoholic
Asplenia
Travel within 2
weeks prior
Positive Legionella
urinary antigen
result
Pleural effusion
Xd
NA
Xc
Xe
Points Assigned
Age 65 years
Score
Outpatient
Outpatient
Inpatient
Resolution of symptoms
Cough and chest radiographic abnormalities may take 4-6 weeks to improve. There
is NO need to extend antibiotics if the patient is doing well otherwise (e.g. afebrile
and clinically improving).
There is no need for routine follow-up chest radiograph if the patient is otherwise
improving.
Other considerations
Consider influenza during season (November through March) or in returning
travelers and test and treat appropriately.
Consider Pneumococcal and Influenza vaccines if indicated.
Consider HIV test.
References:
IDSA/ATS Consensus Guidelines for CAP: Clin Infect Dis 2007;44:S27.
Capelastegui A, et al. Eur Respir J 2006;27:151-7
TREATMENT NOTES
Diagnosis
The clinical diagnosis can be made if the patient has a new radiographic infiltrate PLUS
at least two of the followoing: fever >38 C, leukocytosis or leukopenia, or purulent
secretions.
Etiologic diagnosis generally requires a lower respiratory tract culture, preferably obtained
before the administration of antibiotic therapy.
Microbiology
Gram-negative rods including Enterobacteriaceae (e.g. Klebsiella, E. coli, Serratia)
Anaerobes (rarely)
Legionella
S. aureus (MRSA and MSSA)
Pseudomonas (IF risk factors are present - see above)
Enterococci, Stenotrophomonas, and Candida species are often isolated from the
sputum in hospitalized patients. In general, they should be considered to be colonizing
organisms and should not be treated with antimicrobials.
Antimicrobial management of aspiration in the hospital
Prophylactic antibiotics ARE NOT recommended for patients who are at increased risk
for aspiration.
Immediate treatment is indicated for patients who have small-bowel obstruction or are on
acid suppression therapy given the increased risk of gastric colonization.
Antibiotic treatment of patients who develop fever, leukocytosis, and infiltrates in the first
48h after an aspiration is likely UNNECESSARY since most aspiration pneumonias are
chemical and antibiotic treatment may only select for more resistant organisms.
Treatment IS recommended for patients who have symptoms for more than 48 hours or
who are severely ill.
References:
Aspiration pneumonitis and aspiration pneumonia: N Engl J Med 2001;344(9):665.
ATS/IDSA Guidelines for HAP/VAP: AJRCCM 2005;171:388.
Antimicrobial therapy should be tailored once susceptibilities are known. Vancomycin should be
stopped if resistant Gram-positive organisms (MRSA) are not recovered. Gram-negative
coverage can be reduced to a single susceptible agent in most cases. The benefits of
combination therapy in the treatment of Pseudomonas VAP are not well-documented; if it is
desired then combination therapy should be given for the first 5 days of therapy only (see the
section on double coverage of Gram-negative organisms).
Duration
7-8 days if the patient has clinical improvement, Pseudomonas may require longer
treatment.
If symptoms persist at 8 days consider: alternate sources for infection, non-infectious
causes (e.g. ARDS, CHF), and bronchoscopy with quantitative cultures.
VAP associated with S. aureus bacteremia should be treated for a minimum of 14 days.
TREATMENT NOTES
Microbiology
Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA and MSSA), Pseudomonas aeruginosa, other
Gram-negative bacilli, Legionella
Enterococci, Stenotrophomonas, and Candida species are often isolated from the
sputum in intubated patients. In general, they should be considered to be colonizing
organisms and should NOT be treated with antimicrobials.
Diagnosis
VAP is difficult to diagnose.
Bacteria in endotracheal secretions may represent tracheal colonization and NOT
infection. Not all positive sputum cultures should be treated.
Quantitative cultures of BAL fluid can help distinguish between colonization and infection;
104 cfu/ml is considered significant growth.
Other considerations
Tracheal colonization of Gram-negatives and S. aureus is not eradicated even though
lower airways are sterilized. Thus, post-treatment cultures in the absence of clinical
deterioration (fever, rising WBC, new infiltrates, worsening ventilatory status) are not
recommended.
Inadequate initial treatment of VAP is associated with higher mortality (even if treatment is
changed once culture results are known).
Efforts to reduce the duration of therapy are justified by studies of the natural history of
the response to therapy. Data support the premise that most patients with VAP who
receive appropriate antimicrobial therapy have a good clinical response within the first 6
days. Prolonged therapy simply leads to colonization with antibiotic resistant bacteria.
References:
Antiviral Agents
Medication
Adult Dosing
Side Effects
Notes
Oseltamivir
Treatment:
75 mg PO BID x 5d
Prophylaxis:
75 mg PO daily
Common: nausea,
vomiting
Dose adjustment
needed for GFR <30
ml/min
Treatment:
10 mg (2 oral
inhalations) BID x 5d
Prophylaxis:
10 mg (2 oral
inhalations) daily
Common: diarrhea,
nausea, cough,
headache, and
dizziness
Zanamivir
Severe:
hypersensitivity,
neuropsychiatric
Should NOT be used
in patients with
chronic airway
diseases
Severe:
bronchospasm,
hypersensitivity
Infection Control
All established Occupational Health Services and Hospital Epidemiology policies should
be followed by all UCLA employees. Policy IC002
(http://www.mednet.ucla.edu/Policies/pdf/enterprise/HSIC002.pdf) and Policy IC005
http://www.mednet.ucla.edu/Policies/pdf/enterprise/HSIC005.pdf
All individuals with suspected influenza infection should be placed on Droplet
Precautions. When outside their room (e.g. during transport) patients should wear a
mask.
All heathcare workers should receive the influenza vaccine yearly.
All healthcare workers, as well as family/visitors must wear a surgical mask while caring
for patients with confirmed or suspected influenza. These precautions should be
maintained until it is determined that the cause of symptoms is not an infectious agent
that requires Droplet Precautions.
Employees who are febrile or have flu-like symptoms during flu season should stay
home. If they become sick while at work, they must go to Occupational Health Services.
http://ohs.uclahealth.org
Employees who have cold symptoms, such as cough and runny nose, WITHOUT fever
should wear a surgical mask during patient contact.
mycobacteria (NTM) that are detected in clinical specimens by direct microscopy using and
acid-fast stain.
Negative AFB smear does not rule out active TB.
Cultures may take 6 weeks to grow.
Tuberculin Skin Test (TST): Intradermal injection of purified protein derivative (PPD) and
measurement of induration diameter in 48-72 hours for diagnosis of latest TB infection (also
positive in most active TB cases).
Criteria for a positive test are:
5mm - high risk of developing active TB (e.g. HIV, close contact of TB case,
immunocompromised)
10mm - other risk factors for TB infection (healthcare worker, IV drug use,
diabetes)
15mm - no risk factors for TB
QuantiFERON Gold: Immunoserology test that measures T-cell release of interferon-gamma
(IFN-gamma) following stimulation by antigens unique to M. tuberculosisis. The results are
reported as positive, negative, or indeterminate. QuantiFERON Gold results are NOT affected by
prior BCG vaccination and thus are useful in diagnosing latent TB infection in patients with a
history of BCG vaccination. As with the TST, results of this test should be interpreted with other
relevant clinical information such as age, BCG status, history of contact with active TB, and risk
factors that increase the risk of progression to active disease such as immunosuppression.
Latent TB Infection (LTBI): Previous infection with TB that has been contained by the host
immune response.
Patients may have a positive TST or suggestive radiographic findings such as calcified
granulomata or minimal apical scarring, but do not have symptoms of active TB disease.
Not infectious and does not require isolation.
Active TB disease: Active replication of M. tuberculosis causing pulmonary or extrapulmonary
symptoms and/or signs.
Confirmed by positive AFB smear, MTB test, or culture.
Requires airborne isolation.
When to Suspect Active TB Disease
High-risk individuals
Recent exposure to a person with known TB; history of a positive TST or QuantiFERON
Gold; HIV infection; injection or non-injection drug use; foreign birth or residence in a
region in which TB incidence is high; residents and employees of high-risk congregate
settings (e.g. prisons); membership in a medically underserved, low-income population;
anti-TNF alpha therapy
Clinical syndromes
Cough of >2 week duration, with at least one additional symptom, including fever, night
sweats, weight loss, or hemoptysis.
Any unexplained respiratory illness of >2 week duration in a patient at high risk for TB.
Any patient with HIV infection and unexplained cough and fever.
Any patient on anti-TNF alpha therapy with unexplained fever.
Community-acquired pneumonia which has not improved after 7 days of appropriate
treatment.
Incidental findings on chest radiograph suggestive of TB (even if symptoms are minimal
or absent) in a patient at high risk for TB.
Radiographic findings
Primary TB (often unrecognized): Can resemble CAP and involve any lobes; hilar
adenopathy, pleural effusions are common; cavitation is uncommon. Findings often
resolve after 1-2 months. These are common findings in patients with advanced HIV
infection and TB.
Reactivation TB: Infiltrates with or without cavitation in the upper lobes or the superior
segments of the lower lobes; hilar adenopathy is variable; CT scan may have
tree-in-bud appearance.
Diagnosis
Patients with characteristic syndromes and radiographic findings should have
expectorated sputum obtained for AFB smear and culture.
Sensitivity of AFB smear on expectorated sputum is 50-70%; it is lower in HIV+ patients.
Morning expectorated sputum, induced sputum, bronchoscopy have higher sensitivity.
AFB culture of lower respiratory tract specimens is considered the gold standard.
AFB smear and culture should be obtained regardless of chest x-ray findings in patients
with high clinical suspicion, HIV infection, or other immunocompromised states. CXR is
normal in approximately 10% of HIV+ patients with pulmonary TB.
TREATMENT
Active TB
Infectious Diseases consult is strongly advised.
Therapy should be initiated for patients with positive AFB smear and clinical findings
consistent with active TB.
Therapy should be considered for patients with negative AFB smears when suspicion of
TB is high and no alternate diagnosis exists. Multiple specimens should be obtained for
culture prior to initiation of treatment.
Four drugs are necessary for the initial phase (2 months)
Isoniazid (INH) 300 mg* (5 mg/kg) PO daily