PURLs

When to “CAP” Off Pneumonia Treatment

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WHAT’S NEW

Clinical support for 2007 guidelines

This is the first study to clinically support the IDSA/ATS guidelines, which state that a five-day course of antibiotic therapy for hospitalized adults with CAP is effective and without increased risk for adverse events.

CAVEATS

Generalizability is unclear

This study focused on antibiotic duration for the treatment of CAP in hospitalized patients and mainly used quinolone antibiotics. It remains unclear if duration of therapy is as effective in the outpatient setting or when using alternative antibiotic regimens.

If patients continued to have symptoms (eg, fever or low oxygen saturation on room air) after five days of antibiotics, treatment was continued in the study. Thus, patients in real life who continue to have symptoms may need individualized therapy and may require more than five days of antibiotics.

CHALLENGES TO IMPLEMENTATION

Antibiotics end before clinical improvement

In this study, it took an average of 12 days in both groups for patients to achieve clinical improvement, and upwards of 15 to 18 days for patients to return to normal activity. Patients and providers may be dissatisfied if the treatment course ends days before clinical improvement of symptoms. This may cause prescribers to lengthen the duration of antibiotic therapy inappropriately.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

The PURLs Surveillance System was supported in part by Grant Number UL1RR024999 from the National Center For Research Resources, a Clinical Translational Science Award to the University of Chicago. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Center For Research Resources or the National Institutes of Health.

Copyright © 2017. The Family Physicians Inquiries Network. All rights reserved.

Reprinted with permission from the Family Physicians Inquiries Network and The Journal of Family Practice (2017; 66[10]:629-631).

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