| Literature DB >> 32072494 |
João Ferreira-Coimbra1, Cristina Sarda2, Jordi Rello3,4.
Abstract
Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is the leading cause of death among infectious diseases and an important health problem, having considerable implications for healthcare systems worldwide. Despite important advances in prevention through vaccines, new rapid diagnostic tests and antibiotics, CAP management still has significant drawbacks. Mortality remains very high in severely ill patients presenting with respiratory failure or shock but is also high in the elderly. Even after a CAP episode, higher risk of death remains during a long period, a risk mainly driven by inflammation and patient-related co-morbidities. CAP microbiology has been altered by new molecular diagnostic tests that have turned viruses into the most identified pathogens, notwithstanding uncertainties about the specific role of each virus in CAP pathogenesis. Pneumococcal vaccines also impacted CAP etiology and thus had changed Streptococcus pneumoniae circulating serotypes. Pathogens from specific regions should also be kept in mind when treating CAP. New antibiotics for CAP treatment were not tested in severely ill patients and focused on multidrug-resistant pathogens that are unrelated to CAP, limiting their general use and indications for intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Similarly, CAP management could be personalized through the use of adjunctive therapies that showed outcome improvements in particular patient groups. Although pneumococcal vaccination was only convincingly shown to reduce invasive pneumococcal disease, with a less significant effect in pneumococcal CAP, it remains the best therapeutic intervention to prevent bacterial CAP. Further research in CAP is needed to reduce its population impact and improve individual outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: CAP; Community-acquired pneumonia; Epidemiology; Infectious disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32072494 PMCID: PMC7140754 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-020-01248-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
CAP epidemiology and mortality worldwide
| Period | Type of study | Age (years old) | Overall CAP incidence per 1000 p/y | CAP incidence < 65 years per 1000 p/y | CAP incidence > 65 years per 1000 p/y | Admission (%) | In-hospital mortality (%) | Mortality (30 days, %) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Europe | |||||||||
| Spain [ | 2000–10 | P | > 16 | NA | NA | NA | 82.4 | NA | 0.5 |
| Europe [ | 2005–12 | R | > 15 | 1.1–1.7 | NA | 14 | 2.5–4.3 | NA | NA |
| UK [ | 2006–10 | R | > 65 | 6.3–10.1 | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
| Iceland [ | 2008–09 | P | > 18 | 2.1b | 1.37 | 9.02 | NA | 3 | NA |
| Spain [ | 2009–13 | R | > 18 | 4.63 | 2.5–5.8 | 5.4–36.9 | NA | NA | NA |
| Germany [ | 2010–11 | R | > 18 | 9.7 | NA | NA | 46.5 | 17.2 | 12.9 |
| France [ | 2011–12 | P | > 18 | 4.70 | NA | 6.70 | 7.0a | NA | 0.30 |
| USA | |||||||||
| USA (NYC) [ | 2000–14 | R | > 18 | 4.8b | NA | NA | NA | 7.9 | NA |
| USA [ | 2010–12 | P | > 18 | 2.5b | NA | NA | NA | 2.0 | NA |
| USAa [ | 2014–16 | P | > 15 | 6.3 | 3.3 | 20.9 | 7.3 | 6.5 | 13.0 |
| South America | |||||||||
| Latin America [ | 1970–08 | Rw | > 50 | 2.9–29.0 | NA | NA | 11.4–45.3 | 7.6–9.8 | 12.4–13.1 |
| Argentinaa [ | 2012–15 | P | > 18 | 1.8–7.0 | 2.3–11.9 | 10.9–29.4 | NA | NA | 12.1c |
| Asia | |||||||||
| New Zealand [ | 2002–03 | R | > 15 | 8.6 | NA | 18.8 | 2.7–9.9 | NA | NA |
| Japana [ | 2011–13 | P | > 15 | 16.9 | 4.5–11.8 | 42.3 | 5.3 | 11.5 | NA |
| South Korea [ | 2011–14 | R | ≥ 19 | 3.1 | 0.9–3.6 | 16–48 | NA | 6.2 | NA |
| Australia [ | 2011–13 | R | > 19 | 2.5 | NA | NA | NA | 7.8 | NA |
Rw review article, R retrospective study, P prospective study, NA not available, p/y persons/year
aReported as annual percentage
bHospital cohort
c14-day mortality
Bacterial pathogens isolated in CAP
| Period | Type of study | Number | Bacterial diagnosis, % | Others | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Poulose (Singapore) [ | 2003–05 | P | 80 | 30 (38.0) | 10 (33.3) | 1 (3.3) | 1 (3.3) | 1 (3.3) | 2 (6.6) | 0 | 0 | 1 (3.2) | 14 |
| Lui et al. (China) [ | 2004–05 | P | 1193 | 342 (28.7) | 101(29.5) | 62 (18.1) | NR | NR | NR | 78 (22.8) | 55 (16.1) | 1 (0.3) | 82 (24.0) |
| Johansson et al. (Sweden) [ | 2004–05 | P | 184 | 115 (62.5) | 70 (60.1) | 9 (7.8) | 4 (3.5) | 3 (2.6) | 7 (6.1) | 15 (8) | 0 | 3 (2.6) | 4 |
| Shindo et al. (Japan) [ | 2010 | P | 887 | 475 (53.6) | 152 (32) | 92 (19.4) | 88 (18.5) | 23 (4.8) | 32 (6.7) | 11 (2.3) | 31(6.5) | 7(1.5) | 39 |
| Cao et al. (China) [ | 2010 | P | 197 | 81 (41.1) | 9 (11.1) | 1 (1.2) | 0 | 1 (1.2) | 0 | 63 (77.7) | 0 | 0 | 7 |
| Cillóniz et al. (Spain) [ | 2010–11 | P | 568 | 188 (33.2) | 66 (35.1) | 9 (4.8) | 1 (0.5) | 2 (1.1) | 0 | 29 (15.4) | 10 (5.3) | 13 (6.9) | 16 (8.5) |
| Jain et al. (USA) [ | 2010–12 | P | 2320 | 306 (13.2) | 115 (37.6) | 13 (4.2) | 37 (12.1) | 0 | 0 | 43 (14.1) | 9 (2.9) | 32 (10.4) | 57 (18.6) |
| Seo et al. (South Korea) [ | 2010–16 | R | 1665 | 859 (51.6) | 178 (20.7) | 10 (1.2) | 40 (4.7) | 30 (3.5) | 0 | 165 (19.2) | 224 (26.1) | 9 (1.0) | 166 (19.3) |
| Dagaonkar et al. (Mumbai, India) [ | 2012 | P | 1000 | 580 (58.0) | 133 (23.0) | 5 (9.0) | 0 | 0 | 35 (6.0) | 29 (5.0) | 64 (11.0) | 17 (3.0) | 297 (51.2) |
| Gadsby et al. (UK) [ | 2012–14 | P | 323 | 231 (71.5) | 115 (49.8) | 130 (56.3) | 33 (14.3) | 0 | 44 (19.0) | 6 (2.6) | 0 | 3 (1.3) | 67 (29.0) |
| Aston et al. (Malawi) [ | 2013–15 | P | 459 | 278 (60.6) | 98 (35.3) | 0 | 2 (0.7) | 0 | 0 | 6 (2.2) | 2 (0.7) | 6 (2.2) | 20 (7.2) |
| Para et al. (North India) [ | 2013–15 | P | 225 | 153 (68) | 61 (39.9) | 0 (0.0) | 12 (7.8) | 0 | 0 | 13 (8.5) | 10 (6.5) | 33 (21.6) | 31 (20.3) |
| Di Pasquale et al. (GLOBAL) [ | 2015 | R | 3702 | 869 (23.2) | 268 (24.6) | 75 (6.9) | 188 (16.3) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 31 (3.6) | 309 (35.6) |
| Sahuquillo-Arce et al. (Spain) [ | 2016 | P | 4304 | 1526 (35.5) | 933 (61.1) | 42 (2.8) | 41 (2.7) | 0 | 0 | 51 (3.3) | 50 (3.3) | 110 (7.2) | 141 (9.2) |
Rw review article, R retrospective study, P prospective study, NR not reported
Viral pathogens isolated in CAP
| Period | Number | Influenza viruses, | Rhinovirus, | Respiratory syncytial virus, | Parainfluenza viruses, | Other respiratory viruses, | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lui et al. (China) [ | 2004–05 | 1193 | 102 (8.5) | NR | NR | NR | 0 |
| Johansson et al. (Sweden) [ | 2004–05 | 184 | 14 (7.6) | 12 (6.5) | 7 (3.8) | 7 (3.8) | 0 |
| Cao et al. (China) [ | 2010 | 197 | 9 (4.6) | 2 (1.0) | 2 (1.0) | 4 (2.0) | 7 (3.5) |
| Cillóniz et al. (Spain) [ | 2010–11 | 568 | 16 (2.8) | 6 (1.1) | 1 (0.2) | 1 (0.2) | 1 (0.2) |
| Jain et al. (USA) [ | 2010–12 | 2259 | 132 (5.8) | 194 (8.6) | 68 (3.0) | 67 (3.0) | 173 (7.7) |
| Seo et al. (South Korea) [ | 2010–16 | 1665 | 15 (0.9) | 2 (0.1) | 2 (0.1) | 2 (0.1) | 6 (0.4) |
| Gadsby et al. (UK) [ | 2012–14 | 323 | 23 (7.1) | 41 (12.7) | 4 (1.2) | 11 (3.4) | 19 (5.9) |
| Aston et al. (Malawi) [ | 2013–15 | 459 | 40 (8.8) | 17 (3.7) | 8 (1.7) | 17 (3.7) | 98 (21.6) |
| Para et al. (North India) [ | 2013–15 | 225 | 13 (5.8) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 (0.0) |
| Di Pasquale et al. (GLOBAL) [ | 2015 | 3050 | 0 | 0 | 7 (0.2) | 0 | 11 (0.4) |
NR not reported
Unmet clinical needs in CAP
| Therapy |
| What time is acceptable to start antibiotics in patients with CAP? |
| Why is evidence of short duration antibiotic therapy in CAP not applied in clinical management? |
| Which patients should be treated with antiviral therapy in CAP? |
| Should antiviral therapy be used empirically during influenza seasonal epidemics or all year? |
| Could PK/PD interventions change the outcomes in severe CAP? |
| In non-severe CAP might new oral antibiotics be directed to once-daily dosages? |
| What is the role of tetracyclines in CAP treatment? |
| In severe CAP what is the best drug on top of beta-lactam therapy: macrolide or quinolone? |
| Adjunctive therapies |
| Which patients will benefit from steroid therapy in CAP? |
| What are the best steroid, steroid dose and duration in CAP? |
| In patients with CAP presenting with high inflammatory response, can steroid therapy improve hard outcomes? |
| How should viral infection be excluded before steroid treatment? |
| Can steroids and macrolides have an addictive anti-inflammatory effect? |
| Is PCV13 superior to PPV23 in invasive pneumococcal disease and pneumococcal CAP? |
| Prevention |
| Which is the best scheme/schedule of anti-pneumococcal vaccination? |
| Is vaccine efficacy equivalent in immunocompetent and immunosuppressed patients? |
| Is adult pneumococcal vaccination cost-effective in settings with high childhood vaccination rates? |
| Will vaccines directed to |
| Epidemiology |
| New randomized controlled trial (RCT) to study performance of new drugs in patients with severe CAP (PSI > 120, PORT class V) |
| Which is the epidemiology of lethal CAP? |
| What is the real burden of morbidity and mortality after CAP? |
| How should microbiologic surveillance be performed in a global way? |
New antibiotics for CAP treatment
| Reported severity of patients included in trials | Dose and posology | |
|---|---|---|
| Ceftobiprole | All hospitalized patients; PORT risk class V: 1.7% of population studya | 500 mg, iv, 8/8 h, 2 h infusion |
| Ceftaroline | Only PORT risk class III or IV (not admitted to ICU on recruitment) | 600 mg, iv, 12/12 h |
| Omadacycline | PORT risk class II, III or IV | 100 mg, iv, 12/12 h for 2 doses, followed by 100 mg, iv, daily, or 300 mg, orally, daily |
| Delafloxacin | PORT risk class II–V, excluding patients admitted to ICU (not yet published) | 300 mg, iv, 12/12 h or 450 mg, orally, 12/12 h |
| Solithromycin | PORT risk class II–IV in both trials | 800 mg orally (or 400 mg iv), on the first day followed by 400 mg orally or iv, daily |
| Lefamulin | (a) PORT risk class ≥ III, excluding mechanically ventilated; in PORT class III–V, not mechanically ventilated; (b) PORT risk class II–IV | 150 mg, iv, 12/12 h or 600 mg, orally, 12/12 h |
PORT Pneumonia Patient Outcomes Research Team, iv intravenous
aCeftobiprole arm 1.2% (4/314) and comparator arm 2.2% (7/329)
Pneumococcal vaccine indications and described vaccine efficacy
| Pneumococcal polysaccharide 23-valent | Pneumococcal conjugate 13-valent | |
|---|---|---|
| Serotypes included | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6B, 7F, 8, 9N, 9V, 10A, 11A, 12F, 14, 15B, 17F, 18C, 19F, 19A, 20, 22F, 23F and 33F | 1, 3, 4, 5, 6A, 6B, 7F, 9V, 14, 18C, 19A, 19F and 23F |
| Vaccine efficacy [ | ||
| IPD | 60.0% | 75.0% |
| PCAP | 63.8% | 45.6% |
| Vaccine indications | ||
| Immunocompromised | HIV, nephrotic syndrome, chronic kidney disease, immunodeficiency (congenital and acquired), metastatic cancer, lymphoma, leukaemia, Hodgkin disease, multiple myeloma, transplanted, immunosuppressed Asplenia (functional and anatomical): congenital, acquired and haemoglobinopathies | |
| Immunocompetent | Age > 65, cochlear implant, cerebrospinal fluid leak, medical co-morbiditiesa | |
IPD invasive pneumococcal disease, PCAP pneumococcal community-acquired pneumonia
a(Dependent of country policy) chronic heart, lung or liver disease, diabetes mellitus, smoking, alcohol use disorder
| Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is a major health concern, because it is a very frequent and deadly condition. |
| CAP etiology is changing owing to the recognized importance of viruses, pneumococcal and influenza vaccines. |
| New drugs were developed to treat CAP; however, most of them focus on non-severe CAP. |
| Despite the frequency of CAP, several recommendations are based on low quality evidence. We have therefore defined several unmet clinical needs to promote research on CAP. |