Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2021 Jul;42(7):817-825. doi: 10.1017/ice.2020.1312. Epub 2020 Dec 1.
Viruses are more common than bacteria in patients hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia. Little is known, however, about the frequency of respiratory viral testing and its associations with antimicrobial utilization.
Retrospective cohort study.
The study included 179 US hospitals.
Adults admitted with pneumonia between July 2010 and June 2015.
We assessed the frequency of respiratory virus testing and compared antimicrobial utilization, mortality, length of stay, and costs between tested versus untested patients, and between virus-positive versus virus-negative patients.
Among 166,273 patients with pneumonia on admission, 40,787 patients (24.5%) were tested for respiratory viruses, 94.8% were tested for influenza, and 20.7% were tested for other viruses. Viral assays were positive in 5,133 of 40,787 tested patients (12.6%), typically for influenza and rhinovirus. Tested patients were younger and had fewer comorbidities than untested patients, but patients with positive viral assays were older and had more comorbidities than those with negative assays. Blood cultures were positive for bacterial pathogens in 2.7% of patients with positive viral assays versus 5.3% of patients with negative viral tests (P < .001). Antibacterial courses were shorter for virus-positive versus -negative patients overall (mean 5.5 vs 6.4 days; P < .001) but varied by bacterial testing: 8.1 versus 8.0 days (P = .60) if bacterial tests were positive; 5.3 versus 6.1 days (P < .001) if bacterial tests were negative; and 3.3 versus 5.2 days (P < .001) if bacterial tests were not obtained (interaction P < .001).
A minority of patients hospitalized with pneumonia were tested for respiratory viruses; only a fraction of potential viral pathogens were assayed; and patients with positive viral tests often received long antibacterial courses.
在因社区获得性肺炎住院的患者中,病毒比细菌更为常见。然而,对于呼吸道病毒检测的频率及其与抗菌药物使用的关联,人们知之甚少。
回顾性队列研究。
本研究包括美国 179 家医院。
2010 年 7 月至 2015 年 6 月间因肺炎入院的成年人。
我们评估了呼吸道病毒检测的频率,并比较了检测患者与未检测患者、病毒阳性患者与病毒阴性患者之间的抗菌药物使用、死亡率、住院时间和费用。
在 166273 例入院时患有肺炎的患者中,有 40787 例(24.5%)接受了呼吸道病毒检测,其中 94.8%检测了流感,20.7%检测了其他病毒。在 40787 例接受检测的患者中,有 5133 例(12.6%)病毒检测结果为阳性,通常为流感和鼻病毒。与未检测的患者相比,检测患者年龄更小,合并症更少,但与病毒检测结果为阴性的患者相比,病毒检测结果为阳性的患者年龄更大,合并症更多。阳性病毒检测结果患者的血液培养阳性率为细菌病原体为 2.7%,而阴性病毒检测结果患者的血液培养阳性率为 5.3%(P<0.001)。总体而言,病毒阳性患者的抗菌药物疗程比病毒阴性患者短(平均 5.5 天比 6.4 天;P<0.001),但因细菌检测结果而异:如果细菌检测结果为阳性,为 8.1 天比 8.0 天(P=0.60);如果细菌检测结果为阴性,为 5.3 天比 6.1 天(P<0.001);如果未进行细菌检测,为 3.3 天比 5.2 天(P<0.001)(交互 P<0.001)。
少数因肺炎住院的患者接受了呼吸道病毒检测;只有一部分潜在的病毒病原体被检测;而病毒检测阳性的患者通常接受了较长时间的抗菌药物治疗。