Mortality, morbidity, and disease severity of patients with aspiration pneumonia

Michael J Lanspa, Barbara E Jones, Samuel M Brown, Nathan C Dean, Michael J Lanspa, Barbara E Jones, Samuel M Brown, Nathan C Dean

Abstract

Background: Aspiration pneumonia is a common syndrome, although less well characterized than other pneumonia syndromes. We describe a large population of patients with aspiration pneumonia.

Methods: In this retrospective population study, we queried the electronic medical records at a tertiary-care, university-affiliated hospital from 1996 to 2006. Patients were initially identified by International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision code 507.x; subsequent physician chart review excluded patients with aspiration pneumonitis and those without a confirmatory radiograph. Patients with community-acquired aspiration pneumonia were compared to a contemporaneous population of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) patients. We compared CURB-65 (a clinical prediction rule based on Confusion, Uremia, Respiratory rate, Blood Pressure, and age)-predicted mortality with actual 30-day mortality.

Results: We identified 628 patients with aspiration pneumonia, of which 510 were community-acquired. Median age was 77 years, with 30-day mortality of 21%. Compared to CAP patients, patients with community-acquired aspiration pneumonia had more frequent inpatient admission (99% vs 58%) and intensive care unit admission (38% vs 14%), higher Charlson comorbidity index (3 vs 1), and higher prevalence of do not resuscitate/intubate orders (24% vs 11%). CURB-65 predicted mortality poorly in aspiration pneumonia patients (area under the curve, 0.66).

Conclusions: Patients with community-acquired aspiration pneumonia are older, have more comorbidities, and demonstrate higher mortality than CAP patients, even after adjustment for age and comorbidities. CURB-65 poorly predicts mortality in this population.

Copyright © 2012 Society of Hospital Medicine.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Inclusion and exclusion criteria.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Receiver-operating characteristic curve, comparing the eCURB score against 30-day mortality in patients with typical community-acquired pneumonia and in patients with community-acquired aspiration pneumonia. These curves statistically differ, p

Figure 3

Receiver-operating characteristic curve, comparing the…

Figure 3

Receiver-operating characteristic curve, comparing the IDSA/ATS minor criteria for severe community-acquired pneumonia against…

Figure 3
Receiver-operating characteristic curve, comparing the IDSA/ATS minor criteria for severe community-acquired pneumonia against ICU admission in patients with typical community-acquired pneumonia and in patients with community-acquired aspiration pneumonia. These curves statistically differ, p

Figure 4

Distribution of bacterial organism recovered…

Figure 4

Distribution of bacterial organism recovered from 628 patients with aspiration pneumonia. MRSA =…

Figure 4
Distribution of bacterial organism recovered from 628 patients with aspiration pneumonia. MRSA = methicillin resistant S. aureus. MSSA = methicillin sensitive S. aureus. Other = B. cereus (1), Serratia marcescens (1), Nocardia species (1), Acinetobacter bauminii (1), ccapnocytophagia (1), E. corrodens (1), Proteus (1), S. cerevisiae (1). Percentages are expressed as a fraction of 628 patients. Note that the total exceeds 100% due to polymicrobial infection. Viral, fungal, and AFB cultures were not routinely obtained, and not included in this graphic.
Similar articles
Cited by
Publication types
MeSH terms
Related information
Full text links [x]
[x]
Cite
Copy Download .nbib
Format: AMA APA MLA NLM
Figure 3
Figure 3
Receiver-operating characteristic curve, comparing the IDSA/ATS minor criteria for severe community-acquired pneumonia against ICU admission in patients with typical community-acquired pneumonia and in patients with community-acquired aspiration pneumonia. These curves statistically differ, p

Figure 4

Distribution of bacterial organism recovered…

Figure 4

Distribution of bacterial organism recovered from 628 patients with aspiration pneumonia. MRSA =…

Figure 4
Distribution of bacterial organism recovered from 628 patients with aspiration pneumonia. MRSA = methicillin resistant S. aureus. MSSA = methicillin sensitive S. aureus. Other = B. cereus (1), Serratia marcescens (1), Nocardia species (1), Acinetobacter bauminii (1), ccapnocytophagia (1), E. corrodens (1), Proteus (1), S. cerevisiae (1). Percentages are expressed as a fraction of 628 patients. Note that the total exceeds 100% due to polymicrobial infection. Viral, fungal, and AFB cultures were not routinely obtained, and not included in this graphic.
Figure 4
Figure 4
Distribution of bacterial organism recovered from 628 patients with aspiration pneumonia. MRSA = methicillin resistant S. aureus. MSSA = methicillin sensitive S. aureus. Other = B. cereus (1), Serratia marcescens (1), Nocardia species (1), Acinetobacter bauminii (1), ccapnocytophagia (1), E. corrodens (1), Proteus (1), S. cerevisiae (1). Percentages are expressed as a fraction of 628 patients. Note that the total exceeds 100% due to polymicrobial infection. Viral, fungal, and AFB cultures were not routinely obtained, and not included in this graphic.

Source: PubMed

3
Sottoscrivi