Invasive Disease vs Urinary Antigen-Confirmed Pneumococcal Community-Acquired Pneumonia

Autor/a

Ceccato, Adrian

Torres Martí, Antoni

Cillóniz, Catia

Amaro, Rosanel

Gabarrús, Albert

Polverino, Eva

Prina, Elena

Garcia Vidal, Carolina

Muñoz Conejero, Eva

Méndez, Cristina

Cifuentes, Isabel

Puig de la Bellacasa, Jordi

Menéndez, Rosario

Niederman, Michael S.

Data de publicació

2019-11-12T10:14:44Z

2019-11-12T10:14:44Z

2017-06

2019-11-12T10:14:45Z

Resum

Background: The burden of pneumococcal disease is measured only through patients with invasive pneumococcal disease. The urinary antigen test (UAT) for pneumococcus has exhibited high sensitivity and specificity. We aimed to compare the pneumococcal pneumonias diagnosed as invasive disease with pneumococcal pneumonias defined by UAT results. Methods: A prospective observational study of consecutive nonimmunosuppressed patients with community-acquired pneumonia was performed from January 2000 to December 2014. Patients were stratified into two groups: invasive pneumococcal pneumonia (IPP) defined as a positive blood culture or pleural fluid culture result and noninvasive pneumococcal pneumonia (NIPP) defined as a positive UAT result with negative blood or pleural fluid culture result. Results: We analyzed 779 patients (15%) of 5,132, where 361 (46%) had IPP and 418 (54%) had NIPP. Compared with the patients with IPP, those with NIPP presented more frequent chronic pulmonary disease and received previous antibiotics more frequently. Patients with IPP presented more severe community-acquired pneumonia, higher levels of inflammatory markers, and worse oxygenation at admission; more pulmonary complications; greater extrapulmonary complications; longer time to clinical stability; and longer length of hospital stay compared with the NIPP group. Age, chronic liver disease, mechanical ventilation, and acute renal failure were independent risk factors for 30-day crude mortality. Neither IPP nor NIPP was an independent risk factor for 30-day mortality. Conclusions: A high percentage of confirmed pneumococcal pneumonia is diagnosed by UAT. Despite differences in clinical characteristics and outcomes, IPP is not an independent risk factor for 30-day mortality compared with NIPP, reinforcing the importance of NIPP for pneumococcal pneumonia.

Tipus de document

Article
Versió acceptada

Llengua

Anglès

Matèries i paraules clau

Pneumònia adquirida a la comunitat; Infeccions per pneumococs; Community-acquired pneumonia; Pneumococcal Infections

Publicat per

American College of Chest Physicians

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Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chest.2017.01.005

Chest, 2017, vol. 151, num. 6, p. 1311-1319

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chest.2017.01.005

Drets

(c) American College of Chest Physicians, 2017

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