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De-escalation therapy in ventilator-associated pneumonia

Authors :
Medicina i Cirurgia
Universitat Rovira i Virgili
Rello J., Vidaur L., Sandiumenge A., Rodríguez A., Gualis B., Boque C., Diaz E.
Medicina i Cirurgia
Universitat Rovira i Virgili
Rello J., Vidaur L., Sandiumenge A., Rodríguez A., Gualis B., Boque C., Diaz E.
Source :
CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE; 10.1097/01.CCM.0000145997.10438.28; CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE (ISSN/ISBN: 00903493). 32 (11) : 2183-2190
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

To evaluate de-escalation of antibiotic therapy in patients with ventilator-associated pneumonia.Prospective observational study during a 43-month period.Medical-surgical intensive care unit.One hundred and fifteen patients admitted to the intensive care unit with clinical diagnosis of ventilator-associated pneumonia. All the episodes of ventilator-associated pneumonia received initial broad-spectrum coverage followed by reevaluation according to clinical response and microbiology. Quantitative cultures obtained by bronchoscopic examination or tracheal aspirates were used to modify therapy.: None.One hundred and twenty-one episodes of ventilator-associated pneumonia were diagnosed. Change of therapy was documented in 56.2%, including de-escalation (the most frequent cause) in 31.4% (increasing to 38% if isolates were sensitive). Overall intensive care unit mortality rate was 32.2%. Inappropriate antibiotic therapy was identified in 9% of cases and was associated with 14.4% excess intensive care unit mortality. Quantitative tracheal aspirates and bronchoscopic samples (58 protected specimen brush and three bronchoalveolar lavage) were associated with 32.7% and 29.5% intensive care unit mortality and 29.3% and 34.4% de-escalation rate. De-escalation was lower (p < .05) in the presence of nonfermenting Gram-negative bacillus (2.7% vs. 49.3%) and in the presence of late-onset pneumonia (12.5% vs. 40.7%). When the pathogen remained unknown, half of the patients died and de-escalation was not performed.De-escalation was the most important cause of antibiotic modification, being more feasible in early-onset pneumonia and less frequent in the presence of nonfermenting Gram-negative bacillus. The impact of quantitative tracheal aspirates or bronchoscopic techniques was comparabl

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE; 10.1097/01.CCM.0000145997.10438.28; CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE (ISSN/ISBN: 00903493). 32 (11) : 2183-2190
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1135066431
Document Type :
Electronic Resource