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Nursing home-acquired pneumonia presenting at the emergency department

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An Erratum to this article was published on 31 October 2016

Abstract

Nursing home-acquired pneumonia (NHAP) is one of the most common infections arising amongst nursing home residents, and its incidence is expected to increase as population ages. The NHAP recommendation for empiric broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy, arising from the concept of healthcare-associated pneumonia, has been challenged by recent studies reporting low rates of multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria. This single center study analyzes the results of NHAP patients admitted through the Emergency Department (ED) at a tertiary center during the year 2010. There were 116 cases, male gender corresponded to 34.5 % of patients and median age was 84 years old (IQR 77–90). Comorbidities were present in 69.8 % of cases and 48.3 % of patients had used healthcare services during the previous 90 days. In-hospital mortality rate was 46.6 % and median length-of-stay was 9 days. Severity assessment at the Emergency Department provided CURB65 index score and respective mortality (%) results: zero: n = 0; one: n = 7 (0 %); two: n = 18 (38.9 %); three: n = 26 (38.5 %); four: n = 30 (53.3 %); and five; n = 22 (68.2 %); and sepsis n = 50 (34.0 %), severe sepsis n = 43 (48.8 %) and septic shock n = 22 (72.7 %). Significant risk factors for in-hospital mortality in multivariate analysis were polypnea (p = 0.001), age ≥ 75 years (p = 0.02), and severe sepsis or shock (p = 0.03) at the ED. Microbiological testing in 78.4 % of cases was positive in 15.4 % (n = 15): methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (26.7 %), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (20.0 %), S. pneumoniae (13.3 %), Escherichia coli (13.3 %), others (26.7 %); the rate of MDR bacteria was 53.3 %. This study reveals high rates of mortality and MDR bacteria among NHAP hospital admissions supporting the use of empirical broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy in these patients.

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Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank for the contribution of Ana Catarina Patrício, Filipa Silva, Joana Ferreira, Pedro la Féria, Pedro Silva, João Oliveira, Lara Câmara, Rui Malheiro, Rodrigo Leão, Mário Silva, Pedro Russo, Ana Lladó and Paulo Barreto.

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Correspondence to Rui Pereira.

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The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

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The study was approved by the Institution’s Ethics Committee and Administration. All human ethical standards were respected in the study.

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Informed consent was waved due to complete patient anonymity.

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An erratum to this article is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11739-016-1557-9.

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Pereira, R., Oliveira, S. & Almeida, A. Nursing home-acquired pneumonia presenting at the emergency department. Intern Emerg Med 11, 999–1004 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11739-016-1412-z

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