| Literature DB >> 21633541 |
G C Khilnani1, T K Luqman Arafath, Vijay Hadda, Arti Kapil, Seema Sood, S K Sharma.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The diagnosis of ventilator associated pneumonia (VAP) remains a challenge because the clinical signs and symptoms lack both sensitivity and specificity and the selection of microbiologic diagnostic procedure is still a matter of debate. AIMS ANDEntities:
Keywords: Bronchoscopic brush; bronchoalveolar lavage; endotracheal aspirate; non-bronchoscopic bronchoalveolar lavage; ventilator associated pneumonia
Year: 2011 PMID: 21633541 PMCID: PMC3097537 DOI: 10.4103/0972-5229.78218
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Crit Care Med ISSN: 0972-5229
Figure 1The apparatus used for non-bronchoscopic lavage. It comprises two suction catheters (a, b) and one mucus trap (c). The suction catheters have different lengths and luminal diameters. The upper suction catheter (a) is shorter in length (about 47–48 cm) and with wider lumen (16 Fr). The second catheter (b) is longer (50 cm) and with narrower lumen (8 Fr)
Baseline characteristics of patients
| Variables | Results [Mean ± SD (range)] |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 55.60 ± 16.17 (24–80) |
| Duration of ICU stay (days) | 29.52 ± 24 (9–106) |
| Duration of mechanical ventilation (days) | 34.88 ± 32 (7–98) |
| Duration of development of VAP (days) | 18.44 ± 12.18 (4–57) |
| Duration of fever (days) | 4.56 ± 3.14 |
| Duration of increased tracheal secretion (days) | 5.36 ± 2.18 |
| Leukocyte counts of the cohort (per mm3) | 12,447 ± 3592 |
| pO2 of cohort (mm of Hg) | 90 ± 19.18 |
| pCO2 of cohort (mm of Hg) | 47.23 ± 25.12 |
| CPIS of cohort | 6.76 ± 1.67 |
| APACHE II | 23 ± 7.12 |
CPIS – clinical pulmonary infection score
Diagnostic value of various sampling techniques
| Sampling techniques | Yield | Sensitivity (95% CI) | Specificity (95% CI) | PPV (95% CI) | NPV (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ETA | 52 | 55.6 (31.3–77.6) | 71.4 (30.3–94.9) | 83.3 (50.9–97.1) | 38.5 (15.1–67.7) |
| NPBAL | 68 | 83.3 (57.7–95.6) | 71.4 (24.1–94.0) | 88.2 (62.3–97.4) | 62.5 (21.5–88.2) |
| BAL | 64 | 77.8 (51.9–92.6) | 71.8 (24.1–94.0) | 87.3 (60.4–97.8) | 55.5 (17.4–82.6) |
| B Brush | 80 | 94.9 (70.6–99.7) | 57.1 (13.4–86.1) | 85 (61.1–96.0) | 80 (21.9–98.7) |
NPBAL – Non-bronchoscopic protected bronchoalveolar lavage; B brush – Bronchoscopic brush; ETA – Endotracheal aspirate; PPV – Positive predictive value; NPV – Negative predictive value
Concordance among various microbiologic sampling techniques
| Sampling techniques | Kappa coefficient | % Concordance | |
|---|---|---|---|
| NPBAL vs. B brush | 0.694 | 88 | 0.001 |
| BAL vs.B brush | 0.423 | 76 | 0.04 |
| NPBAL vs. BAL | 0.56 | 80 | 0.01 |
| ETA vs.NPBAL | 0.351 | 68 | 0.064 |
| ETA vs.BAL | 0.272 | 64 | 0.161 |
| ETA vs. B brush | 0.426 | 72 | 0.009 |
NPBAL – Non-bronchoscopic protected bronchoalveolar lavage; B brush – Bronchoscopic brush; ETA – Endotracheal aspirate
Organisms isolated in microbiologic cultures
| Organisms | Various respiratory samples [n (%)] | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| B. Brush | BAL | NPBAL | ETA | |
| Sterile | 4(16) | 4(16) | 3(12) | 8 (32) |
| Pseudomonas aerugenosa (ESBL+) | 6(24) | 6(24) | 6(24) | 7 (28) |
| Pseudomonas aerugenosa (ESBL–) | 1(4) | 1(4) | 1(4) | 1 (4) |
| Pseudomonas aerugenosa (ESBL–)and Acinetobacter spp.(ESBL+) | 1(4) | 1(4) | 1(4) | Nil |
| Enterobacter spp.(ESBL+) and Pseudomonasaerugenosa (ESBL+) | 1(4) | 1(4) | 1(4) | Nil |
| Klebsiellaspp. (ESBL–) | 1(4) | 1(4) | 1(4) | Nil |
| Acinetobacter spp.(ESBL+) and Escherichia coli (ESBL+) | 1(4) | 1(4) | 2(8) | Nil |
| Escherichia coli (ESBL+) | 2(8) | 2(8) | 2(8) | 3 (12) |
| Acinetobacter spp.(ESBL+) | 5(20) | 5(20) | 5(20) | 4 (16) |
| Pseudomonas aerugenosa (ESBL+)and Acinetobacter spp.(ESBL+) | 3(12) | 3(12) | 3(12) | Nil |
| Acinetobacter spp.(ESBL–) | Nil | Nil | Nil | 1 (4) |
| Acinetobacterspp. (ESBL+) and Citrobacter (ESBL+) | Nil | Nil | Nil | 1 (4) |
B. brush – Bronchoscopic brush; BAL – Bronchoalveolar lavage; NPBAL – Non-bronchoscopic protected bronchoalveolar lavage; ETA – Endotracheal aspirate; ELBS – Extended spectrum beta-lactamase