Intensive care unit patients with lower respiratory tract nosocomial infections: the ENIRRIs project

Autor/a

Pascale, Gennaro de

Ranzani, Otavio T.

Nseir, Saad

Chastre, Jean

Welte, Tobias

Antonelli, Massimo

Navalesi, Paolo

Garofalo, Eugenio

Bruni, Andrea

Coelho, Luis Miguel

Skoczynski, Szymon

Longhini, Federico

Taccone, Fabio Silvio

Grimaldi, David

Salzer, Helmut J.F.

Lange, Christoph

Froes, Filipe

Artigas, Antonio

Díaz, Emili

Vallés, Jordi

Rodríguez, Alejandro

Panigada, Mauro

Comellini, Vittoria

Fasano, Luca

Soave, Paolo M.

Spinazzola, Giorgia

Luyt, Charles-Edouard

Álvarez Lerma, Francisco

Marin, Judith

Masclans, Joan Ramon

Chiumello, Davide

Pezzi, Angelo

Schultz, Marcus

Mohamed, Hafiz

Van der Eerden, Menno

Hoek, Roger A.S.

Gommers, D. A. M. P. J.

Pasquale, Marta Francesca Di

Civljak, Rok

Kutleša, Marko

Bassetti, Matteo

Dimopoulos, George

Nava, Stefano

Rios, Fernando

Zampieri, Fernando G.

Povoa, Pedro

Bos, Lieuwe D.

Aliberti, Stefano

Torres Martí, Antoni

Martín Loeches, Ignacio

European Network for ICU-related respiratory infections (ENIRRIs)

Fecha de publicación

2018-06-18T10:52:26Z

2018-06-18T10:52:26Z

2017-10

2018-06-18T10:52:26Z

Resumen

The clinical course of intensive care unit (ICU) patients may be complicated by a large spectrum of lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI), defined by specific epidemiological, clinical and microbiological aspects. A European network for ICU-related respiratory infections (ENIRRIs), supported by the European Respiratory Society, has been recently established, with the aim at studying all respiratory tract infective episodes except community-acquired ones. A multicentre, observational study is in progress, enrolling more than 1000 patients fulfilling the clinical, biochemical and radiological findings consistent with a LRTI. This article describes the methodology of this study. A specific interest is the clinical impact of non-ICU-acquired nosocomial pneumonia requiring ICU admission, non-ventilator-associated LRTIs occurring in the ICU, and ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis. The clinical meaning of microbiologically negative infectious episodes and specific details on antibiotic administration modalities, dosages and duration are also highlighted. Recently released guidelines address many unresolved questions which might be answered by such large-scale observational investigations. In light of the paucity of data regarding such topics, new interesting information is expected to be obtained from our network research activities, contributing to optimisation of care for critically ill patients in the ICU.

Tipo de documento

Artículo
Versión publicada

Lengua

Inglés

Materias y palabras clave

Infeccions respiratòries; Assaigs clínics; Respiratory infections; Clinical trials

Publicado por

European Respiratory Society

Documentos relacionados

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00092-2017

ERJ Open Research, 2017, vol. 3, num. 4

https://doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00092-2017

Derechos

cc-by-nc (c) European Respiratory Society, 2017

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/es

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