Guidelines for the Initiation of Empirical Antibiotic therapy in Respiratory Disease (Adults)

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Guidelines for the Initiation of Empirical Antibiotic therapy in Respiratory Disease (Adults) Community Acquired Community Acquired 1) Is it pneumonia? ie new symptoms and signs of a lower respiratory tract infection with NEW CXR SHADOWING. 2) Assess severity (SEVERE vs NON-SEVERE), use clinical judgement, CURB-65 score (see adjacent box), and additional features (e.g. hypoxia < 92% or < 8.0kPa, multilobar consolidation etc). 3) Microbiology specimens:- Severe pneumonia:- send sputum and blood for culture, send urine for pneumococcal & legionella antigen. For nonsevere:- send sputum, only send blood for culture if pyrexial. 4) Choose an antibiotic regimen (see below for guidance). Record reasoning in the medical notes. 5) Reassess patient & antibiotic regimen daily. Adjust according to microbiology results. Consider STEP DOWN from IV to oral Rx if apyrexial at 24-48 hrs with improving clinical state ( WC, CRP, PaO 2 ) 6) A TOTAL (IV+ oral) of 7 days is usually adequate in non-severe CAP & 10 days in uncomplicated severe CAP. See below for special considerations. CURB-65 score Scoring system used to aid clinical judgement including: a) need for admission b) antibiotic choice c) need for escalation of therapy d) risk of mortality Score 1 for each of the following:- New Confusion Urea >7 Respiratory rate > 30/min Blood pressure: systolic <90mm Hg, diastolic < 60mmHg Age over 65 Score 0 or 1 = non-severe pneumonia Score 3, 4 or 5 = severe pneumonia Score 2 = use additional factors for guidance (Relevance of CURB-65 score to outcome - mortality or need for ITU for CURB-65 if: score 0 0.7%, 1 3.2%, 2 13%, 3 17%, 4 41.5%, 5 57%) Special considerations i) If CAP is after recent influenza infection see newly added section on Guidence for Initiation of Empirical Antibiotics in Patients with Suspected/Proven Swine Flu ii) If severe CAP is not responding to treatment, review culture results, discuss with Senior and Microbiology if necessary. iii) 14-28 days may be needed in certain circumstances eg Legionella. Always seek microbiological advice. iv) Klebsiella pneumoniae is a rare pathogen (~1.5%) and will not be covered by the Benzylpenicillin/Teicoplanin and Clarithromycin combination alone. Aspiration pneumonia Risk factors level of consciousness and depressed gag reflex, dysphagia due to local obstruction or neuro disease, intubation and gastric feeding, oesophageal dysmotility and reflux and persistent vomiting, alcoholism. Key issue is differentiation between chemical pneumonitis and infection. Antibiotic always indicated in the latter i.e aspiration pneumonia. In community acquired aspiration pneumonia regimens should cover oral anaerobes and S.milleri group, if hospital acquired suspected then aerobic gram negative bacilli should also be covered. Further information: Microbiology 4105, Ward Pharmacist, Medicines Information 4270

Guidance for the Initiation of Empirical Antibiotics in Community Acquired (CAP) First Line Intravenous Treatment First Line Oral Treatment Penicillin Allergy Non-severe CAP (Non-clinical reasons for admission or previously untreated in the community) CURB-65 0 OR 1 1 st line: Doxycycline PO 200mg 12 hourly for 48 hours then 2 nd line: Amoxicillin PO 500mg 8 hourly Consider adding to amoxicillin if patient not responding for extra atypical cover does not need to be added to doxycycline) 200mg every 24 hours Non-severe CAP (If IV Rx needed eg unable to swallow) CURB-65 0 OR 1 Amoxicillin IV 500mg to 1g 8 hourly Consider adding if not responding Severe CAP ( 70 years old) see CURB-65 guidance above Co-amoxiclav IV 1.2g 8 hourly, plus Co-amoxiclav PO 625mg 8 hourly, plus Teicoplanin IV 400mg 12 hourly for 3 doses then 400mg every 24 hours, plus # Add Gentamicin IV once daily if clinical concern & review need for further dose at 24hrs (see Trust Gentamicin policy) Step down to:- Severe CAP ( > 70 years old, to minimise the risk of developing C. Difficile) see CURB-65 guidance above Community Aspiration (all ages) IV or oral: decision based on clinical assessment Benzylpenicillin IV 1.2g to 2.4g 6 hourly, plus # Add Gentamicin once daily if clinical concern & review need for further dose at 24 hrs (see Trust Gentamicin policy) Amoxicillin IV 500mg to 1g 8 hourly, plus Metronidazole IV 500mg 8 hourly Amoxicillin PO 500mg to 1g 8 hourly, plus Metronidazole PO 400mg 8 hourly Special considerations # Klebsiella pneumoniae is a rare pathogen (~1.5%) & will not be covered by the Benzylpenicillin/Teicoplanin & Clarithromycin combination alone. Teicoplanin IV 400mg 12 hourly for 3 doses then 400mg every 24 hours, plus # Add Gentamicin once daily if clinical concern & review need for further dose at 24hrs (see Trust Gentamicin policy) Step down to:-, plus Metronidazole IV 500mg 8 hourly step down to;, plus Metronidazole PO 400mg 8 hourly l

Guidance for Empirical use of Antibiotics in (onset >72 hrs admission) Condition First Line Intravenous Treatment First Line Oral Treatment Penicillin Allergy (Non Severe) If not responding at 48 hours treat as Severe HAP 200mg every 24 hours If not responding at 48 hours treat as Severe HAP (Severe with normal renal function) Amoxicillin IV 500mg to 1g 8 hourly, plus # Gentamicin IV once daily (see Trust Gentamicin policy) IF MRSA +ve or MRSA possible: ( ICID Vancomycin (See dosing guidance on plus # Gentamicin IV once daily Step down :- Review culture results. Discuss with Senior or Microbiology if necessary. Teicoplanin IV 400mg 12 hourly for 3 doses then 400mg every 24 hours or Vancomycin IV (if known or suspect MRSA) plus # Gentamicin IV once daily (see Trust Gentamicin policy) Step down :- Review culture results. Discuss with Seniors or Microbiology if necessary. (Severe with impaired renal function e.g GFR < 40ml/min) See Renal Impairment: Antibiotic Dosing Guidelines (ICID) for dose adjustment Piperacillin- tazobactam IV (Dose according to CrCl :see renal drug handbook http://intranet/icid/medicinesmanagement/guidance/ generalguidance/renaldrughandbook.asp) Plus, if known MRSA or suspect MRSA ( ICID IV Vancomycin (See dosing guidance on Step down :- Review culture results. Discuss with Senior or Microbiology if necessary. Teicoplanin IV 400mg 12 hourly for 3 doses then 400mg every 24 hours or Vancomycin IV (if known or suspect MRSA) plus Non severe penicillin allergy : Meropenem IV for dosing in renal impairment refer to renal handbook on ICID.If meropenem to be used seek approval from microbiology in hours or following morning if out of hours Severe penicillin allergy : Ciprofloxacin IV/PO (note cipro C.diff risk factor for >70yrs)- for dosing in renal impairment refer to renal handbook on ICID See Vanomycin dosing guidance on ICID Aspiration Plus Metronidazole IV 500mg 8 hourly To regimen (not needed if Piperacillin-tazobactam) Plus Metronidazole PO 400mg 8 hourly To regimen # See Trust Gentamicin policy, ICID Review culture results. Discuss with Seniors or Microbiology if necessary. Plus Metronidazole IV 500mg 8 hourly To regimen ( not needed if Meropenem)

l Guidance for the Initiation of Empirical Antibiotics in an Infective Exacerbation of COPD Acute Exacerbation of Chronic Obtructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Acute exacerbations of COPD are characterised by worsening of a previously stable situation. Differentiation from pneumonia is based on the ABSENCE OF NEW CXR SHADOWING and localising physical signs in the chest. Antibiotics are appropriate if there is purulent sputum and/or sputum volume together with SOB/wheeze. Ensure a sputum sample is sent. For most patients a TOTAL of 5-7 days antibiotics is likely to be adequate. First Line Intravenous Treatment Oral Treatment Penicillin Allergy Moderate disease 1 st Choice 1 st Choice (Consider the therapy already started in the community eg if on low dose try a higher dose of same antibiotic) or Amoxicillin PO 500mg to 1g 8 hourly 2 nd Choice 2 nd Choice (no response to 1 st Choice 48hrs) Ciprofloxacin PO 500mg 12 hourly (no response to 1 st Choice 48 hrs) Co-amoxiclav PO 625mg 8 hourly 3 rd Choice (no response to 1 st & 2 nd choices) Ciprofloxacin PO 500mg 12 hourly Severe disease (eg respiratory failure/non-invasive ventilation) Co-amoxiclav IV 1.2g 8 hourly Step down to:- Amoxicillin PO 500 mg 8 hourly, or Co-amoxiclav PO 625mg 8 hourly Review sputum results & discuss with Senior or Microbiology if necessary

Guidance for the Initiation of Empirical Antibiotics in Patients with suspected/proven Swine Flu First Line Intravenous Treatment First Line Oral Treatment Penicillin Allergy Adult patients of all ages with suspected community or hospital acquired bacterial pneumonia secondary to influenza infection Co-amoxiclav IV 1.2g 8 hourly, plus Doxycycline PO 200mg 12 hourly for 48 hours then Teicoplanin IV 400mg 12 hourly for 3 doses then 400mg every 24 hours, plus Step down to: Adult patients with suspected/confirmed influenza and signs of non-severe CAP bacterial infection being discharged from Emergency Department. Doxycycline PO 200mg 12 hourly for 48 hours then OR Co-amoxiclav PO 625mg 8 hourly 7 day course recommended 200mg every 24 hours 200mg every 24 hours 7 day course recommended