Antibiotics in acute respiratory failure SATS mod 2008
Download
Report
Transcript Antibiotics in acute respiratory failure SATS mod 2008
Antibiotics in Acute
Respiratory Failure
Robin J Green PhD
Division of Paediatric Pulmonology
University of Pretoria
Definitions
ALI- acute onset of impaired gas exchange
PaO2/FIO2 <300
ARDS- PaO2/FIO2 <200
Oxygenation index=( MAP x FI02/Pao2)x100
Acute Lung Injury
CAP
HIV-associated pneumonia
HAP/VAP
Viral lung disease
Definition CAP
Acute infection (less than 14 days) acquired
in the community, of the lower respiratory
tract, leading to cough or difficulty breathing,
tachypnoea or chest-wall indrawing
Accounts for 30-40% of all hospital
admissions
Case fatality rate 15-28%
Zar HJ, et al SAMJ 2005
Causes CAP
Bacterial:
- Strep Pneumoniae
- Haemophilus influenzae
- Staph aureus
- Moraxella catarrhalis
Atypical bacteria
- Mycoplasma pneumoniae
- Chlamydaphila pneumoniae/trachomatis
Viral
- RSV
- Human metapneumovirus
- Parainfluenza
- Adenovirus
- Influenza
- Rhinovirus
- Measles virus
Causes of CAP
In addition in HIV-infected children
Gram-negative bacteria
Staph aureus (including CA-MRSA)
TB
Fungi
Organisms cultured - Ward
Meningitis
1 2
Pneumonia 0
0
3
4
3
5
10
Pneumococcus
E. Coli
Staph aureus
Alpha Haem. Strep
None
27
20
30
ESBL Klebs
MRSA
CNS
Salmonella t.
N. Meningitis
40
50
Treatment CAP
Antibiotis for all – Amoxicillin (90mg/kg/day tds 5
days) – (IV Ampicillin)
< 2 months add aminoglycoside/cephalosporin
> 5 years add macrolide
HIV - infection add aminoglycoside
HIV - exposed < 6 months add cotrimoxazole
AIDS add cotrimoxazole
Zar HJ, et al SAMJ 2005
HIV-infected children
No evidence that PK/PD principles are different to
healthy children
All specimens showed resistance to cotrimoxazole.
Savitree Chaloryoo International Journal of Pediatric
Otorhinolaryngology 1998; 44:103-107
Brink A. Personnel communication
PCP Pneumonia
Diagnosis:
- Immune compromised
- Respiratory distress and few crepitations
- Interstitial pattern on CXR
- LDH > 500
- PCR
3. Fluids in ARDS/ALI
NHLBI and ARDS net - FACTT trial
Conservative fluid management strategy favoured
Increase in ventilator free days and reduction in
ICU stay, lower OI, plateau pressure, PEEP,
higher PaO2/FIO2
No increase rates of shock or renal failure
Need to closely monitor electrolytes
Calfee CS, Matthay MA. Chest 2007;131:913-19
Managing Severe PCP
Pneumonia
Lung protective strategies (low tidal volume,
high PEEP)
Fluid restriction
TMX/SMX
Oral steroids
Treating CMV pneumonitis – Ganciclovir
Early introduction HAART
Survival analysis, adjusted age and hospital
Hazard ratio 0.54, 95% CI(0.29-1.02), p value 0.06
1
Cox proportional hazards regression
.4
.6
Survival
.8
Hazard ratio 0.54
95% CI(0.29-1.02)
p value 0.06
0
20
40
analysis time
Placebo
60
Prednisone
Terblanche A, et al. SAMJ 2008
80
CMV Pneumonitis
Diagnosis:
- CMV viral load > 10 000 copies/ml - Blood
- CMV PCR – NBBAL
Treatment:
- Ganciclovir (10mg/kg/dose BD)
- Duration – 3 weeks after starting HAART
HAP
Definition
1. HAP – Pneumonia developing more than
48 hours after admission to hospital
2. VAP – Nosocomial infection occuring in
patients receiving mechanical ventilation
that is not present at the time of intubation
and develops more than 48 hours after
initiation of ventilation
Epidemiology
Pneumonia = 2nd most common nosocomial
infection
Accounts for 18 – 26% of nosocomial
infections
Children aged 2 – 12 months most affected
95% of nosocomial pneumonia occurs in
ventilated children
Risk Factors
Immunodeficiency
Immunosuppression
Neuromuscular blockage
Septicaemia
TPN
Steroids
H2-blockers
Mechanical ventilation
Re-intubation
Transport while intubated
Microbiology
Early-onset VAP:
- Strep pneumoniae
- Haemophilus influenzae
- Moraxella catarrhalis
Late-onset VAP (Resistant species):
- Staph aureus
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Lactose fermenting gram-negatives
Organisms cultured - PICU
Meningitis 0
Pneumonia 0
0
3
11
5
Pneumococcus
MRSA
Gram positive cocci
Non haem strep
None
10
15
ESBL Klebs
CNS
Sternotrophomonas
Bacillus sp
N. Meningitis
20
Criteria for VAP for Infants Younger than
12 Months of Age
Clinical Criteria / Radiographic Criteria
Worsening gas exchange with at least 3 of the clinical criteria:
Temperature instability without other recognized cause
White blood cells <4,000/mm3 or > 15,000/mm3 and band forms > 10%
New onset purulent sputum or change in the character of sputum or increased respiratory
secretions
Apnea, tachypnea, increased work of breathing, or grunting
Wheezing, rales, or rhonchi
Cough
Heart rate <100 beats/min or >170 beats/min
plus radiographic criteria
At least 2 serial chest x-rays with new or progressive and persistent infiltrate, consolidate,
cavitation or pneumatocele that develops >48 hours after initiation of mechanical ventilation
Wright ML, et al. Semin Pedaitr Infect Dis 2006;17:58-64
Prevention Strategies
Head of bed elevation
Daily sedation holidays
Stress ulcer prophylaxis
DVT prophylaxis
Pneumococcal vaccination
Change in ventilator circuits only when dirty
Avoidance of re-intubation
Orotracheal intubation
Oropharyngeal toilet
Management
Antibiotic selection policies
De-escillation
Antibiotic rotation
Regular microbiology for a
Antibiotic STEWARDSHIP
Dosage
Correct antibiotic dosages and duration
Correct antibiotic administration
- Concentration dependent antibiotics
(Aminoglycosides, quinolones) = single daily
concentration
- Time dependent antibiotics (B-lactams,
vancomycin, pip-taz, carbapenems, linezolid)
= continuous infusion over 24 hours or
multiple dosings (3-4 hours for carbapenems)
Duration
No culture = 3 – 5 days
Positive culture = 5-7 days.
Seldom need 10 days
Exceptions
– Staph 2-3 weeks
- PCP 3 weeks
- Fungal 2-3 weeks
De-escillation
If broad spectrum antibiotics or
combinations used downgrade with positive
culture and sensitivity
Vancomycin can be used alone
Single antibiotics = combinations
Decontaminate
Hand washing – the most effective startegy
to prevent resistance
All personnel and parents must hand wash
Anti-inflammatory strategies of Macrolides
Dont
Use third generation cephalosporins
routinely (except meningitis)
Use inappropriate antibiotics
Use a long course
Use too low a dose
Routinely combine antibiotics
Routinely use probiotics
Antibiotics for ESBL
Carbapenem
- Meropenem
- Imipenem
- Ertapenem (Invanz)
Cefepime (Maxipime)
Piperacillin/tazobactam (Tazocin)
Never – Ciprofloxacin/3rd Generation
Cephalosporins
Risk factors for and outcomes of bloodstream infection
caused by ESBL-producing Escherichia coli and
Klebsiella species in children
Paediatrics 2005;115: 942-949
Antibiotics for MRSA
Vancomycin (highly protein bound – better
for septicaemia)
Linezolid (Zyvoxid) – better lung
penetration
Teicoplanin
Bronchiolitis
Viral Identification 2007
14
12
10
RSV
Para'flu
'Flu
Adeno
8
6
4
2
0
Jan
March
May
July
Bronchiolitis in HIV positive
children
12% of bronchiolitics at PAH are HIV
positive
Mean age 8 months old (vs 3 months in non
HIV-infected children)
No increase in numbers co-infected in more
mild disease
CRP vs WCC
30
WCC
25
20
15
10
5
0
0
50
100
150
CRP
200
Pearson correlation
r = 0.138
250
CRP vs % Neut
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Pearson correlation r = 0.373
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
Summary
CAP = Ampicillin +/HAP = Meropenem +/PCP = Bactrim + oral steroids + Ganciclovir
Bronchiolitis = nothing ?
Using this policy and noting that all HIVinfected children are offered ventilation if
required – Mortality in PICU at PAH = 18.7%
Aknowledgement
Dr Refiloe Masekela
Dr Omolemo Kitchin
Dr Teshni Moodley
Dr Sam Risenga
Prof Max Klein