Pneumonia, Bacterial
BASICS
- Definition: Acute infection of the pulmonary parenchyma caused by bacteria.
- Classification:
- Community-Acquired Pneumonia (CAP): Outpatient, Nonsevere Inpatient, Severe/ICU.
- Nosocomial Pneumonia:
- Hospital-Acquired Pneumonia (HAP): ≥48 hours after admission.
- Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia (VAP): ≥48 hours after intubation.
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- CAP Incidence: 24.8 cases/10,000 adults/year in US; 5–6/1,000 persons/year.
- Leading infectious cause of death (esp. in children <5 years globally).
- HAP: 5–20/1,000 admissions; VAP incidence 6–20x higher in ventilated patients.
ETIOLOGY AND PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- Outpatient CAP (Adults):
- Typical (85%): Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Staph aureus, group A Strep, Moraxella catarrhalis.
- Atypical (15%): Legionella, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Chlamydophila pneumoniae.
- Inpatient, Severe CAP/HAP/VAP:
- Gram-negatives: Pseudomonas, E. coli, Klebsiella, Acinetobacter.
- Gram-positives: Streptococcus spp., Staph aureus (incl. MRSA).
- Pediatric:
- Birth–3 weeks: E. coli, GBS, Listeria.
- <3 months: C. trachomatis, S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae.
- 3 mo–18 yrs: S. pneumoniae, C. pneumoniae, M. pneumoniae.
RISK FACTORS
- Immunosuppression (steroids, HIV, transplant, TNF-α inhibitors)
- Chronic illnesses (asthma, COPD, diabetes, CKD, CHF, liver disease)
- Age >65, recent antibiotics/hospitalization
- Functional decline, poor oral hygiene, tobacco use
GENERAL PREVENTION
- Vaccination:
- Children: PCV13 at 2, 4, 6, 12–15 months
- Adults ≥65 years: PCV20 (per CDC recommendations)
- At-risk adults 19–64: PCV20 if chronic disease
- Annual influenza vaccination
- Smoking cessation
DIAGNOSIS
History
- Fever, chills, rigors, malaise, fatigue, dyspnea, cough (± sputum), pleuritic chest pain, myalgias, GI symptoms.
- Pediatrics: lethargy, hypotonia, poor feeding, vomiting.
Physical Exam
- Fever, tachypnea, tachycardia, hypoxemia
- Decreased breath sounds, rales, rhonchi, egophony, increased fremitus, dull percussion
- Grunting, retractions in children
Special Populations
- Older adults: may present with confusion, weakness, falls
- Infants <3–6 months: higher risk, admit for inpatient treatment
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Viral pneumonia, bronchitis, asthma/COPD exacerbation, pulmonary edema, tuberculosis, lung cancer, pneumonitis, rheumatologic causes
DIAGNOSTIC TESTS & INTERPRETATION
Outpatient
- Clinical diagnosis; no routine labs/imaging for healthy adults.
Inpatient
- CBC, CRP, chest x-ray.
- Severe cases: blood/sputum cultures, urine pneumococcal/Legionella antigens, endotracheal aspirate (if intubated).
- Procalcitonin is NOT recommended.
- MRSA/Pseudomonas risk: screen with rapid tests; cover if positive.
Pediatrics
- Viral testing in children <2 years (high viral etiology)
- CXR, cultures for severe or complicated cases
TREATMENT
Severity Scoring
- Use PSI or CURB-65 for admission/level of care decisions, but clinical judgment is essential.
Adults
- CAP, Outpatient (No MRSA/Pseudomonas/comorbidity):
- Doxycycline 100 mg BID
- OR Azithromycin (if local resistance <25%)
- CAP, Outpatient (Comorbidity):
- Doxycycline 100 mg BID PLUS
- Amox/clav 875/125 mg BID OR cefpodoxime 200 mg BID OR cefuroxime 500 mg BID
- OR monotherapy with respiratory fluoroquinolone
- CAP, Inpatient Nonsevere:
- β-lactam (ceftriaxone/amp-sulb/cefotaxime) + macrolide (azithro/clarithro)
- OR respiratory fluoroquinolone monotherapy
- CAP, Inpatient Severe:
- β-lactam + macrolide OR β-lactam + respiratory fluoroquinolone
- If MRSA risk: add vancomycin or linezolid
- If Pseudomonas risk: add cefepime/meropenem/pip-tazo/aztreonam
- Duration: Minimum 5 days; IV→PO switch when stable.
HAP/VAP
- Cover S. aureus, Pseudomonas, other Gram-negatives
- Add MRSA coverage if at risk or local prevalence high
- Double Pseudomonas coverage if high resistance risk or unknown susceptibilities
Pediatrics
- Outpatient, presumed typical: Amoxicillin 90 mg/kg/day PO BID (max 4g/day)
- Outpatient, presumed atypical: Azithromycin or doxycycline (>7 yrs)
- Inpatient, uncomplicated: Ampicillin or ceftriaxone; add vancomycin/clindamycin if CA-MRSA suspected
- Duration: 5 days (outpatient), 7 days (<6 months), longer if complicated
ONGOING CARE
- Supportive: Analgesia, antipyretics, O2, fluids as needed
- Chest physiotherapy, minimize aspiration, monitor vitals
- Patient education: Smoking cessation, vaccination
DISCHARGE CRITERIA (Inpatient)
- Afebrile, stable HR/RR/O2, able to tolerate PO, mental status baseline, clinical improvement for 12–24 hrs
COMPLICATIONS
- Necrotizing pneumonia, empyema, abscess, cavitation, bronchopleural fistula, sepsis, respiratory failure
ICD-10
- J15.9 Unspecified bacterial pneumonia
- J15.4 Pneumonia due to other streptococci
- J14 Pneumonia due to Hemophilus influenzae
CLINICAL PEARLS
- Always use a severity of illness score to guide disposition but confirm with clinical judgment.
- Vaccination (pneumococcal, influenza) and smoking cessation are key prevention strategies.
- Most pediatric pneumonia is viral—avoid unnecessary antibiotics.
- Procalcitonin is NOT recommended for pneumonia management.
- For MRSA or Pseudomonas risk: obtain rapid diagnostics, adjust antibiotics accordingly.
- Short-course therapy (5 days) is effective for most uncomplicated cases.