학술논문

Management of Non-Ventilated hospital acquired pneumonia
Document Type
article
Source
Clinical Infection in Practice, Vol 21, Iss , Pp 100350- (2024)
Subject
Infectious and parasitic diseases
RC109-216
Language
English
ISSN
2590-1702
Abstract
Non-ventilated hospital acquired pneumonia (NV-HAP) is defined as pneumonia that develops at least 48 h after hospital admission in the non-invasively ventilated patient. Guidance in the management of NV-HAP has historically used extrapolated research from the wider field of HAP, which includes patients with the separate clinical entity of ventilator associated pneumonia (VAP), or the field of community acquired pneumonia (CAP). However, NV-HAP is being increasingly recognised as a subtype of HAP owing to its high incidence, mortality, morbidity and health-economic burden. With a wide range of underlying causative organisms, the management approach focuses on initial broad-spectrum coverage of common bacterial pathogens. If microbiological results are available, targeted treatment can be started. Throughout all phases of treatment, supportive measures must also be considered. This includes the use of physiotherapy, oxygen and ventilatory support, fluid therapy and nutritional support. Research is ongoing into novel treatments, including new antimicrobials, nebulised therapies and monoclonal antibodies. Future research would benefit from a focussed approach that aims to standardise clinical and research definitions and treats NV-HAP as a separate entity to VAP. Collection of specific data would allow for the development of risk-stratification or severity tools which have been fundamental in improving the management of other pneumonia patients, for example, the use of CURB-65 in CAP. Review of commonplace supportive measures in the NV-HAP population would also be beneficial in view of the mostly frail co-morbid population affected.