| Literature DB >> 28944408 |
Abstract
Childhood community acquired pneumonia continues to be an important clinical problem at the individual, institutional and community levels. Determination of microbial etiology is critical to develop evidence-based management (therapeutic and prophylactic) decisions. For decades, the approach to this relied on culture of lung aspirate specimens obtained from children with radiographically confirmed pneumonia, before administering antibiotics. Such studies revealed the major bacteria associated with pneumonia, prompting the World Health Organization to develop a highly sensitive clinical definition of pneumonia and advocate empiric antibiotic therapy; in order to save lives (focusing on community settings lacking resources for diagnostic tests). However, it spawned research studies conducted in/from/by institutions enrolling children with the relatively non-specific WHO definition of pneumonia. Specificity got further compromised by abandoning lung aspiration and using naso/oro pharyngeal specimens; even in children who had received antibiotics. This led to the recovery of viruses more often than bacteria. The use of highly sensitive molecular based diagnostics (especially PCR) facilitated the detection of multiple organisms (bacteria, viruses, atypical organisms and even fungal species); making it difficult to attribute etiology in individual cases. This challenge was sought to be addressed through the multi-site PERCH Study (Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health), designed as a case-control study to conclusively determine the etiology of pneumonia. However, despite a slew of publications, the answer to the central question of etiology has not emerged so far. Since none of the PERCH Study sites was located in India, the Community Acquired Pneumonia Etiology Study (CAPES) was conducted at Chandigarh. This turned out to be the largest single-centre pneumonia etiology study, and generated a wealth of data. This article summarizes the current challenges in pneumonia etiology research; outlines the key observations from the PERCH and CAPES projects, as well as other important studies; and suggests a way forward for pneumonia etiology research in the current era.Entities:
Keywords: Acute lower respiratory tract infection; Bacteria; Etiology; Polymerase chain reaction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28944408 PMCID: PMC7090409 DOI: 10.1007/s12098-017-2486-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Pediatr ISSN: 0019-5456 Impact factor: 1.967
Summary of lung aspirate studies around the world till 2000. Data calculated from Vuori-Holopainen [24]
| Europe | North America | South America | Africa | Asia | Oceania | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre 1950 | |||||||
| Studies | 6 | 5 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 13 |
| Sample size | 2–61 | 13–405 | 52–233 | 1071 | |||
| Bacteria identified | 30–100% | 18–100% | 78–92% | 551 (51.4%) | |||
| 1951–1970 | |||||||
| Studies | 1 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 9 |
| Sample size | 51 | 1–32 | 125 | 17–25 | 272 | ||
| Bacteria identified | 65% | 0–100% | 54% | 29–44% | 119 (43.8%) | ||
| 1971–1980 | |||||||
| Studies | 0 | 1 | 6 | 5 | 3 | 1 | 16 |
| Sample size | 27 | 21–530 | 7–88 | 68–193 | 18 | 1321 | |
| Bacteria identified | 22% | 10–57% | 17–79% | 53–88% | 44% | 455 (34.4%) | |
| 1981–1990 | |||||||
| Studies | 0 | 0 | 0 | 5 | 1 | 1 | 7 |
| Sample size | 40–108 | 70 | 83 | 402 | |||
| Bacteria identified | 33–67% | 51% | 61% | 220 (54.7%) | |||
| Post 1991 | |||||||
| Studies | 0 | 0 | 0 | 7 | 5 | 12 | |
| Sample size | 1–99 | 12–100 | 669 | ||||
| Bacteria identified | 38–100% | 16–50% | 333 (49.8%) | ||||
Challenges in confirming microbial etiology of childhood pneumonia
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| •Pneumonia” is a pathologic diagnosis with clinical and radiographic correlates that can suggest (but not necessarily confirm) its presence. However, histopathologic confirmation is not feasible in individual cases or epidemiologic studies. |
| •Surrogate definitions compromise either sensitivity (for example radiographic definition) and/or specificity (for example WHO definition) or both (for example clinician diagnosed pneumonia) |
| •Multiplicity of definitions across studies with difficulty in comparison(s). |
| •Studies restricted to hospitalized children create a bias associated with health-seeking behavior and/or strong referral systems and/or survival ( |
| •Studies using radiographic inclusion criteria do not always use standardized criteria. |
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| •In modern times, it is highly unlikely that Koch’s postulates (for determining etiology) can be fulfilled in any research study. |
| •The assumption that identification of an organism indicates causality (even from lung aspirates and/or blood samples) is not necessarily correct. |
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| •The ideal specimen would be lung tissue |
| •The closest to this ideal (radiographically guided lung aspirate/ biopsy; or broncho-alveolar lavage, at the onset of illness or at least at presentation) is difficult for ethical, technical and/or epidemiologic reasons. |
| •Lung aspirates/biopsy or broncho-alveolar lavage specimens later in the course of disease, or after death; in hospitalized children can create the risk of detecting hospital acquired pathogens (especially in sick children with multiple interventions including intubation). |
| •The lung is not necessarily a sterile tissue and has a dynamic microbiome that could be influenced by a variety of factors. |
| •Lung aspiration is also not fool-proof and negative results have been observed despite targeting the correct area and obtaining appropriate representative samples. There are of course risks associated with the technique although it is regarded safe in expert hands. |
| •Blood has limited sensitivity (and possibly specificity) in childhood pneumonia. |
| •Nasal swabs/ nasopharyngeal aspirates/ nasopharyngeal swabs/ oropharyngeal swabs do not necessarily reflect the organisms in the lower airways or lungs. |
| •Sputum is often not produced by infants and young children. |
| •Induced sputum is a viable alternative, but requires premedication with bronchodilator and has the risk of inducing emesis. |
| •Gastric aspirate and/or lavage samples are useful only for detecting organisms resistant to gastric acid. |
| •The volume of blood used for culture alters the results. The ideal volume of blood required may not be obtainable in young infants and children. |
| •Use of prior antibiotics (rampant in settings with uncontrolled access) compromises findings in blood and to some extent, lung aspirates. |
| •There are no biomarkers that correlate with microbial etiology |
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| •Samples need to be collected, transported to the lab and processed appropriately. Although sample collection is often timely, there are delays in transport and/or processing. |
| •Culture is the usual gold standard for bacteria but has limited sensitivity. For some organisms, PCR (or other molecular based methods) have higher sensitivity, but it is difficult to distinguish between live organisms, dead organisms, or remnants of organisms. |
| •Molecular methods to detect organisms such as PCR are generally reported as positive or negative. However, this depends on the limits of detection (which are generally not reported). |
| •PCR can detect only the organisms that are looked for; in other words, there is an inherent selection bias. This results in missing organisms, that were not searched for and/or novel/unexpected organisms. |
| •Studies designed to identify one (or a limited number of selected) micro-organisms, are inherently biased. |
| •Highly sensitive methods often reveal footprints of multiple organisms; but the contributory role of these (in etiology) is unclear. |
| •Serology based tests for atypical organisms are unreliable for determination of etiology. |
| •Detection of antigens in urine lacks specificity. |
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| •The detection of one or more organisms in various biological specimens need not mean causality. |
| •The significance and interpretation of different organisms in different biological specimens of individual cases, is unclear. |
| •Case control studies can only suggest pathogenicity (in the overall group), but not confirm it (in individual cases or the whole group). |
| •Case control studies cannot factor in data from multiple specimens as invasive/painful methods are generally not used in controls. |
| •It is unclear which children (healthy or those with non pneumonia respiratory infections) should serve as controls in case-control studies. |
| •Statistical methods such as latent class analysis can slot cases into etiology ‘classes’, but do not confirm etiology in individual cases. |
Salient results available from the PERCH study till August 2017
| •PERCH enrolled 4232 cases and 5325 controls from nine sites in seven developing countries. The controls included healthy children as well as those with respiratory symptoms not fulfilling the definition of pneumonia [ |
| •Serum bioassay confirmed prior antibiotic use in over 25% cases and 2.3% controls. Evaluation through combined assessment of history, referral document and bioassay, identified prior antibiotic use in 43.5% cases [ |
| •Prior antibiotic exposure reduced the probability of detecting most bacteria (by culture and PCR), although the effect on |
| •The volume of blood obtained for culture showed a direct relationship with isolation of bacteria; with highest yield when >4 ml was taken. This effect was consistent for children with and without prior receipt of antibiotics [ |
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| •Quantitative PCR for Pneumococcus in naso/oro pharyngeal samples showed significantly higher load in cases with culture-proven Pneumococcus ( |
| •Although quantitative load of Pneumococcus (determined by PCR) was higher in culture positive cases than controls, significant overlap precluded accurate differentiation, confirming the limited utility of quantitative Pneumococcal PCR in blood for diagnosing Pneumococcal pneumonia [ |
| •There were only 52 microbiologically confirmed cases with any of the following organisms: |
| •Almost 90% cases and 80% controls had at least one of the 17 viruses tested for by multiplex PCR in nasopharyngeal/oropharyngeal samples; the respective proportions for 2 viruses were 53% and 40%; and for >3 viruses were 18% and 12% [ |
| •Quantitative estimation of viral load in nasopharyngeal/oropharyngeal samples showed considerable overlap between radiographically confirmed cases and controls. Children with very severe pneumonia and those who died did not have higher viral loads. These findings suggest that quantitative PCR for viruses may not be discriminatory [ |
| •The yield of bacteria and viruses by PCR of induced sputum samples was comparable to that obtained by PCR of naso/oropharyngeal specimens. Quantitative analysis did not provide additional information [ |
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| •Nineteen hundred thirty five of 3587 interpretable chest radiographs (54%) showed abnormality; although consolidation was seen in far fewer children, and there was significant variation across sites. Classic clinical signs of severe pneumonia (hypoxemia, fever, tachypnea, |
| •CRP ≥40 mg/L was observed in 77% of 119 HIV-negative cases with bacterial pneumonia (defined by positive blood culture or positive lung aspirate or pleural fluid culture or PCR) compared with 17% of 556 RSV pneumonia cases (defined as nasopharyngeal/oropharyngeal or induced sputum PCR-positive without confirmed/suspected bacterial pneumonia), suggesting utility for distinguishing bacterial |
| •There were wide variations in the results obtained from the 9 sites with significant differences between sites in Asia compared to Africa [ |
| •PERCH has developed a bio-repository of specimens for later testing [ |
Salient findings, conclusions, strengths and limitations of the Community Acquired Pneumonia Etiology Study (CAPES)
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| •Blood culture yielded organisms in approximately 2% children |
| The most common organism isolated in blood was |
| •Gram negative bacilli ( |
| •Broncho-alveolar lavage culture done in a limited number of cases (but not at presentation) identified organisms in only 10%. |
| •Corresponding PCR of BAL yielded organisms in 93% samples; however a single organism (bacteria or virus) was found in only 33%. The rest had multiple organisms in different combinations. |
| •Nasopharyngeal aspirate culture was positive in only about 15% cases with |
| •Multiplex PCR of nasopharyngeal aspirate samples yielded multiple bacteria and viruses. Only 1.4% children did not show any of the 25 species looked for. The majority (59%) had multiple organisms, making it impossible to attribute causality. |
| •A single bacterial species was observed in only 9.8% cases; and a single virus identified in only 6.5% cases. |
| •Surprisingly, cytomegalovirus (CMV) was the dominant isolate among viruses, followed by RSV, followed by Rhinovirus, Coronavirus, Parainfluenza virus, Influenza virus, |
| •The yield of bacteria on PCR of nasopharyngeal aspirates was several fold higher than culture (76% |
| •The patterns of distribution of organism classes was similar in children with non-severe, severe and very severe pneumonia. |
| •The distribution of organisms in children who died was not significantly different from survivors. |
| •Serology tests (done in duplicate) for |
| •Even among cases with a single bacterial or viral isolate, analysis of various factors showed that it is impossible to predict bacterial |
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| •Nasopharyngeal samples are inappropriate specimens to determine pneumonia etiology. |
| •The presence of multiple organisms in the majority of broncho-alveolar lavage specimens (albeit taken during the course of illness, rather than presentation) precludes attribution of etiology in most cases. |
| •It is difficult to determine whether detection of multiple potential pathogens, represents true mixed infection, or whether infection by one organism encourages a harmless colonizer to become pathogenic. |
| •Blood culture has poor sensitivity for pneumonia etiology, but |
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| •Largest single-centre study of childhood pneumonia etiology |
| •Recruitment of community and hospital cases. |
| •Standard case definitions of pneumonia and pneumonia severity. |
| •Standard reporting protocol for chest radiography. |
| •Sample processing and testing were done in accredited laboratories in India. |
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| •No tests were done to confirm antibiotic activity in serum; hence results could not be separately analyzed in children with and without prior antibiotic therapy. |
| •Multiplex PCR could be undertaken in only a subgroup of children representing the whole cohort (on account of financial constraints). |
| •Serotyping of bacteria (especially |
| •Broncho-alveolar lavage was not performed at presentation (in accordance with the institutional protocol); further doing it in intubated children creates the risk of detecting hospital acquired colonization/infection. |
| •Lung aspirates were not performed. |
| •PCR testing was qualitative, and not quantitative (although the limits of detection for each organism were pre-specified). |
| •Analysis of results, by chest radiograph findings is pending. |