Chakrabarti Biswajit, Wootton Dan, Lane Steven, Kanwar Elizabeth, Somers Joseph, Proctor Jacyln, Prospero Nancy, Woodhead Mark
1Aintree University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Liverpool, UK.
2Institute of Infection and Global Health, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
Pneumonia (Nathan). 2018 Mar 25;10:2. doi: 10.1186/s41479-018-0047-4. eCollection 2018.
The majority of patients with community acquired-pneumonia (CAP) are treated in primary care and the mortality in this group is very low. However, a small but significant proportion of patients who begin treatment in the community subsequently require admission due to symptomatic deterioration. This study compared patients who received community antibiotics prior to admission to those who had not, and looked for associations with clinical outcomes.
This study analysed the Advancing Quality (AQ) Pneumonia database of patients admitted with CAP to 9 acute hospitals in the northwest of England over a 12-month period.
There were 6348 subjects (mean age 72 [SD 16] years; gender ratio 1:1) admitted with CAP, of whom 17% had been pre-treated with antibiotics. The in-hospital mortality was 18.6% for the pre-treatment group compared to 13.2% in the "antibiotic naïve" group ( < 0.001). On multivariate analysis, age, male gender and antibiotic pre-treatment were predictors of in-hospital mortality along with a history of cerebrovascular accident, congestive cardiac failure, dementia, renal disease and cancer. After adjustment for CURB-65 score, age, co-morbidities and pre-treatment with antibiotics remained as independent risk factors for in-hospital mortality (OR 1.43, 95% CI 1.19-1.71).
CAP patients admitted to hospital were more likely to die during admission if they had received antibiotics for the same illness pre-admission. Future studies should endeavor to determine the mechanisms underlying this association, such as microbiological factors and the role of comorbidities. Patients hospitalized with CAP despite prior antibiotic treatment in the community require close monitoring.
大多数社区获得性肺炎(CAP)患者在基层医疗中接受治疗,且该组患者的死亡率非常低。然而,一小部分但比例显著的患者在社区开始治疗后,随后因症状恶化而需要住院治疗。本研究比较了入院前接受社区抗生素治疗的患者与未接受社区抗生素治疗的患者,并寻找与临床结局的关联。
本研究分析了在12个月期间入住英格兰西北部9家急症医院的CAP患者的“提升质量(AQ)肺炎数据库”。
共有6348名CAP患者入院(平均年龄72岁[标准差16岁];性别比1:1),其中17%曾接受过抗生素预处理。预处理组的住院死亡率为18.6%,而“未用过抗生素”组为13.2%(<0.001)。多因素分析显示,年龄、男性、抗生素预处理以及脑血管意外病史、充血性心力衰竭、痴呆、肾病和癌症病史是住院死亡率的预测因素。在调整CURB-65评分、年龄、合并症后,抗生素预处理仍是住院死亡率的独立危险因素(比值比1.43,95%可信区间1.19-1.71)。
因同一疾病入院前接受过抗生素治疗的CAP住院患者在住院期间死亡的可能性更大。未来的研究应努力确定这种关联背后的机制,如微生物因素和合并症的作用。尽管在社区接受过抗生素治疗,但因CAP住院的患者仍需密切监测。