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. 2010 May;34(4):237-45.
doi: 10.1016/j.medin.2009.11.008. Epub 2010 Jan 29.

[Community-acquired pneumonia: a 7-years descriptive study. Usefulness of the IDSA/ATS 2007 in the assessment of ICU admission]

[Article in Spanish]
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Free article

[Community-acquired pneumonia: a 7-years descriptive study. Usefulness of the IDSA/ATS 2007 in the assessment of ICU admission]

[Article in Spanish]
C Sabatier et al. Med Intensiva. 2010 May.
Free article

Abstract

Objective: To describe the clinical characteristics and outcomes of patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) admitted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). To evaluate new ATS/IDSA criteria to identify patients with CAP who required admission to ICU.

Design: Retrospective analysis of prospective collected data in a 7-year period (2000-2007).

Setting: Medical-surgical ICU with 16 beds.

Patients: All patients with severe CAP admitted to the ICU (n=147). PRIMARY ENDPOINTS: Clinical and microbiological characteristics. Prognostic factors. Comparison of patients admitted in the ICU and ATS/IDSA criteria (group 1: > or = 1 major criterion, group 2: > or = 3 minor criteria and group 3: no criterion).

Intervention: None.

Results: Admission to the ICU is required for patients with acute respiratory failure (60.5%) and with septic shock (28.5%). A total of 71.4%, had an identifiable microbial etiology, S. pneumoniae being the most frequently isolated. Mean time to antibiotic therapy was 4.3+/-4.2h, this being adequate in 97.1%. ICU global mortality rate was 32%. Prognostic factors associated with higher mortality were acute renal failure (OR:4.7), mechanical ventilation (OR:3.4), non-identifiable etiology (OR:4.2) and non-S. pneumonia etiology (OR:3.5). Sixty-eight percent of the patients were included in the first group of the ATS/IDSA criteria and 21% in the second group.

Conclusions: CAP mortality is still high despite early antibiotic therapy, especially in those patients with a non-S. pneumonia etiology or who require mechanical ventilation. Almost 90% of the ICU admissions were identified by the new criteria from ATS/IDSA.

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