Optimizingdiagnosisand Managementofcommunity-Acquiredpneumoniainthe Emergencydepartment
Optimizingdiagnosisand Managementofcommunity-Acquiredpneumoniainthe Emergencydepartment
Optimizingdiagnosisand Managementofcommunity-Acquiredpneumoniainthe Emergencydepartment
Management of Community-
a c q u i red Pn e u m o n i a i n th e
E m e r g e n c y De p a r t m e n t
Katherine M. Hunold, MD, MPHa,*, Elizabeth Rozycki, PharmD, BCPSb,
Nathan Brummel, MD, MSCIc
KEYWORDS
Pneumonia Community-acquired pneumonia Diagnosis and management
Emergency medicine
KEY POINTS
Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is a common cause of emergency department
(ED) visit with higher mortality in the youngest and oldest patients.
ED-specific guidelines do not recommend the routine use of polymerase-chain reaction
pathogen assays or other biomarkers to guide antibiotic initiation.
Recommend empiric treatment for low-risk outpatients with no comorbidities is amoxi-
cillin or doxycycline. In patients with comorbidities and/or risk factors for resistant organ-
isms, this should be escalated to combination therapy with a beta-lactam and beta-
lactamase inhibitor plus doxycycline or a macrolide.
Blood and sputum cultures should be obtained in patients with severe CAP and those initi-
ated on broad-spectrum antibiotics.
INTRODUCTION
a
Department of Emergency Medicine, The Ohio State University, 376 W 10th Avenue, 760 Prior
Hall, Columbus, OH 43220, USA; b Emergency Medicine, Department of Pharmacy, The Ohio
State University, 376 W 10th Avenue, 760 Prior Hall, Columbus, OH 43220, USA; c Division of
Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, The Ohio State
University, 376 W 10th Avenue, 760 Prior Hall, Columbus, OH 43220, USA
* Corresponding author.
E-mail address: Katherine.Buck@osumc.edu
CURRENT GUIDELINES
The most current relevant guidelines for treatment of CAP in the ED are the 2019 In-
fectious Disease Society of American/American Thoracic Society (IDSA/ATS) CAP
guidelines,4 the 2020 American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) Clinical Pol-
icy,5 and the 2011 Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society and IDSA CAP pediatric
guidelines.6 Recently published recommendations from the European Respiratory So-
ciety, the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine, and Latin America Thoracic
Association provide guidelines specifically for the management of severe CAP.7
DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA
Both the 2019 IDSA/ATS CAP guidelines4 and 2020 ACEP Clinical Policy5 define pneu-
monia as symptoms of pneumonia plus radiographic evidence of pneumonia. This
definition was not updated from previous guidelines, and at this time, this clinical/radio-
graphic combination definition is the diagnostic standard. However, these criteria have
significant limitations that must be considered by clinicians including but not limited to
their performance in certain populations and the accuracy of chest radiographs.
CAP is further classified into nonsevere or severe based on the acuity of illness. The
IDSA/ATS provide specific criteria for severe CAP that include factors such as specific
vital sign abnormalities and need for vasopressors or mechanical ventilation.4 Severe
CAP is defined by the presence of at least 1 major criterion or 3 minor criteria. Empiric
antibiotic recommendations vary depending on whether or not the patient meets se-
vere CAP criteria or has risk factors for infection with multidrug-resistant organisms.
Populations that require special therapeutic considerations include pediatrics, geriat-
rics, and those with recent international travel.
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
In the most basic terms, pneumonia is an infection of the lungs. In the majority of
cases, causative organism enters through inhalation or migration from the upper res-
piratory tract or aspiration. While aspiration causes 5% to 15% of CAP8 and is tradi-
tionally associated with geriatric and comorbid patients, aspirating small volumes of
upper airway secretions can occur in young and healthy individuals during sleep.9
Rarely, pneumonia is caused by hematogenous spread, such as from right-sided
endocarditis.
CAUSES OF PNEUMONIA
CAPs are most commonly caused by single bacteria, virus or in rare circumstances
fungal organisms. Coinfections are rare but can also occur, particularly with a virus
and bacterial pathogen. The causative bacterial agents in CAP are classically identi-
fied, in order, as Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Staphylo-
coccus aureus, and gram-negative bacilli.10,11 Importantly, the “atypical” bacteria
are also important to consider as Mycoplasma is identified in 4% to 11% of CAP
and Legionella in 3% to 8%.11 A recent study that included only hospitalized CAP
COVID-19
The COVID-19 pandemic showed the potential for devastation from a novel viral pneu-
monia pathogen with young children (<1 year) and older adults being at highest risk of
mortality.21 Bacterial coinfection with SARS-CoV-2 estimates vary greatly with a
recent meta-analysis reporting a rate of approximately 7%.22–24 As with non-SARS-
CoV-2 infections, bacterial coinfection with SARS-CoV-2 is associated with increased
risk for severe disease (ICU admission, mechanical ventilation) and death.25 Public
health measures instituted during this pandemic decreased the transmission of other
common pneumonia pathogens.26 COVID-19 is discussed in detail elsewhere in this
issue.
Influenza
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, influenza was the most commonly identified cause of
viral CAP,10 with the young children (<5 years of age) and older adults (65 years of age)
at highest risk.27 Peaks of influenza activity occur seasonally.28 The 2019 IDSA/ATS
guidelines recommend rapid testing for influenza during peak times.4 Vaccination de-
creases influenza incidence and associated morbidity and mortality.29 Following the
release of the COVID-19 vaccine, influenza vaccination rates decreased,30 the impact
of which is yet to be determined.
DIAGNOSTIC MODALITIES
There are many potentially useful diagnostic modalities in pneumonia. Importantly, the
utility of the modalities may differ between the ED and inpatient settings. For example,
though frequently obtained in the ED, sputum and blood cultures take several days to
result and are therefore not available to ED physicians. Similarly, laboratory markers
with a single value may have limited value in the ED but may have clinical utility if
trended. Therefore, the following discussion is focused primarily on strategies used
in the ED. Nevertheless, we emphasize that studies that may not be useful in the ED
should still be sent to assist downstream clinicians caring for the patient after ED
disposition, particularly as it pertains to tailoring or de-escalation of antibiotic therapy.
Chest Imaging
One component of the current standard definition of pneumonia is a positive chest
radiograph. However, a recent meta-analysis estimated the sensitivity and specificity
of a chest radiograph for pneumonia to be 75%.31 Debate exists in the literature
among experts about whether positive chest radiography should be required.32
Computed tomography (CT) has been proposed as a potential alternative imaging
test as it is more accurate and this has a demonstrated effect on clinical manage-
ment.33–35 Nevertheless, a recent trial showed no difference in short-term functional
health, hospital admissions, and length of stay, suggesting that though more pneumo-
nias may be detected with CT imaging, these findings may not improve patient out-
comes and therefore there is insufficient evidence to support a change in the
standard of care.36 Further research is needed before a definitive recommendation
can be made about whether CT imaging should be used routinely to diagnose CAP.
The question remains—what should clinicians do with (1) high clinical suspicion and
negative chest radiograph and (2) low clinical suspicion and a vague chest radiograph
report? Based on the available evidence and current guidelines, we recommend treat-
ing empirically in both above cases. The primary driver for this recommendation is the
phenomenon of delayed or initially negative chest radiograph findings37,38 and data
showed positive CT findings of pneumonia with negative chest radiographs.33–36,39
Further, this is consistent with current IDSA/ATS guidelines that no laboratory test
currently exists to reliably and rapidly differentiate viral from bacterial causes of
pneumonia5.4
Ultrasound is another tool that emergency physicians can use to identify lung pa-
thology, including CAP. Lung ultrasound can narrow the differential diagnosis in ED
patients with dyspnea.40 One study demonstrated good accuracy of emergency
physician performed lung ultrasound compared to chest radiograph for pneumonia
diagnosis.41 However, this study enrolled a convenience sample, and ultrasounds
were performed by physicians with ultrasound training and 2 or more years of expe-
rience, limiting generalizability. Another recent study failed to demonstrate an advan-
tage of ultrasound over chest radiograph.42 We recommend considering the use of
lung ultrasound, particularly by emergency physicians with ultrasound training, partic-
ularly as a “rule in” rather than “rule out” tool, pending further studies.
recommend their routine use.5 However, this is an ongoing area of research and it is
unclear how these assays may perform in combination (eg, viral PCR plus biomarkers)
and in conjunction with estimates of pretest probability.
Procalcitonin
Procalcitonin as a laboratory marker of bacterial pneumonia deserves specific discus-
sion, as research is ongoing and rapidly expanding. The traditional critique of procal-
citonin is that a single value cannot be used to determine decision making. However, a
recent study compared the outcomes of patients with suspected viral lower respira-
tory infection and low procalcitonin randomized to azithromycin or placebo and
demonstrated noninferiority.56 Experts debating the strengths and limitations of this
study conclude that using procalcitonin in this manner, which could be directly applied
to EDs, be considered.57 However, the largest ED-based US trial, ProACT Trial,
demonstrated minimal differences in antibiotic prescribing and no difference in short-
or long-term mortality between those treated on a procalcitonin-guided pathway or
not.58–60 The lack of effect on antibiotic prescribing was in part driven by providers
not following the procalcitonin guidance, suggesting lack of confidence in the test
may be a barrier to adoption. Additionally, emergency providers may be asked to
obtain procalcitonin because serial procalcitonin measurements may have utility in
de-escalating inpatient antibiotic therapy61,62
MeMed BV
Since the publication of existing guidelines, MeMed BV (MeMed Diagnostics, Ltd)
was Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved as a test to differentiate bacterial
and viral respiratory infections. A recent study in the US ED demonstrated that while
the test is clinically feasible, less than half of the MeMed BV results were viewed prior
to administration of antibiotics.63 Thus, while the data on MeMed BV are promising,
further study on both implementation and outcomes are necessary before a definitive
recommendation can be made.
RISK STRATIFICATION
There are many risk stratification tools available for CAP to aid the clinician in deciding
appropriate patient disposition (eg, discharge, hospital admission, or ICU admission).
Validated clinical decision rules include the Pneumonia Severity Index (PSI),64 CURB-
65,65 and A-DROP.66 For ED use, the ACEP guidelines recommend PSI and CURB-65
to support clinical judgment to assess which patients may be appropriate for
discharge. The IDSA/ATS favor PSI over CURB-65.4 A recent study showed similar
performance between CURB-65 and A-DROP in ED patients.67 The ACEP guidelines
recommend using the IDSA/ATS minor criteria (see Table 1) to assess need for ICU
admission.5 However, the results of recent literature have been mixed regarding clin-
ical utility of such tools in the ED68,69 supporting the ACEP guideline assertion that
these should only be one part of clinician decision-making.
SPECIAL POPULATIONS
Pediatrics
The 2011 Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society and IDSA CAP pediatric guidelines
are the current standard.6 The most common cause of pneumonia in pediatric
patients is viruses. The advent of widespread vaccine use has decreased the inci-
dence of CAP caused by Haemophilus influenzae type B and Pneumococcal
pneumoniae.51,70
Pediatric symptoms of pneumonia are hard to distinguish from other causes of res-
piratory illness.51 Treatment with antibiotics was previously guided by the World
Health Organization respiratory rate criteria70; the goal of this criterion was to identify
children at risk of death. A more recent systematic review did not find tachypnea asso-
ciated with pneumonia. Instead, hypoxemia and work of breathing were associated
with pneumonia diagnosis.70,71
Importantly, the guidelines recommend avoiding routine use of chest radiography in
patients well enough to be treated as an outpatient (discharged from the ED).6 Emer-
gency physicians should be aware of these guidelines as a recent paper suggests
overuse of chest radiograph.72 Further, the use of diagnostic modalities for pediatric
patients with fever differs between general and pediatric EDs.73 Thus, emergency phy-
sicians should aim to follow the guidelines and only obtain chest radiograph in pedi-
atric patients when admission is required.
Geriatrics
Pneumonia incidence74-related hospitalizations15 and in-hospital mortality75 all in-
crease with age. Because 3 out of 4 adults 65 years of age who are hospitalized
with pneumonia are initially treated in the ED,76 emergency providers must know
how to maximize diagnostic accuracy in this population. Unfortunately, CAP in older
adults poses a diagnostic challenge to emergency physicians and our inpatient col-
leagues.77,78 Geriatric-specific factors that contribute to this challenge include atypical
presentations17,18,79–84; having fewer specific symptoms (ie, shortness of breath, fever)
than young patients; reduced accuracy of chest radiographs85; and presence of comor-
bidities that can mimic CAP.86,87 The utility of the current clinical definition of pneumonia
is unknown in this population, and geriatric-specific pneumonia diagnostic criteria have
been developed in non-ED health care settings.88,89 While older adults residing in long-
term care facilities are also at risk for drug-resistant organisms,90 the current guidelines
do not recommend any changes to standard risk factor-based empiric therapy in older
adults with nonsevere CAP, regardless of living situation.4
Immunocompromised
Immunocompromised patients are at higher risk for atypical causes of pneumonia
across the age span,51,94 but there is no consensus on how this should affect the
empiric antibiotic treatment.94 Immunocompromised patients are excluded from the
CAP guidelines. Clinicians should consider early infectious disease consultation in
these patients.
TREATMENT RECOMMENDATIONS
The IDSA/ATS guidelines state, and the ACEP agrees, “there is no current diagnostic
test accurate enough or fast enough to determine that CAP is solely due to a virus at
presentation, our recommendations are to initially treat empirically for possible bacte-
rial infection or coinfection.”4 Thus, empiric treatment with antibiotics is the current
recommendation. The COVID-19 pneumonia may represent an exception to this
recommendation. Empiric therapy recommendations in this section focus on the adult
population. For outpatients with no comorbidities, treatment primarily focuses on
coverage of S pneumoniae with either amoxicillin or doxycycline (Table 1). Doxycy-
cline has the advantage that it covers atypical organisms and may provide H influenza
and S aureus coverage. While azithromycin monotherapy historically has been used
for outpatient pneumonia, macrolide resistance has increased and azithromycin
should only be used if a local antibiogram shows macrolide resistance of less than
25%. Many patients presenting to the ED with pneumonia will have additional comor-
bidities placing them at risk for resistant pathogens and poor outcomes if initial empiric
therapy is inadequate. Thus, in addition to S pneumoniae coverage, outpatients with
significant comorbidities should receive a regimen that covers H influenzae and Mor-
axella catarrhalis, S aureus, some gram-negative bacteria, and atypical pathogens.
This can be accomplished with either combination therapy consisting of a beta-
lactam and a beta-lactamase inhibitor (amoxicillin-clavulanate) plus doxycycline or a
macrolide or monotherapy with a respiratory fluoroquinolone (levofloxacin or moxiflox-
acin). However, providers should consider the potential for collateral damage with flu-
oroquinolones, including tendinitis, tendon rupture, and peripheral and central
nervous system effects. Additionally, a new fluoroquinolone black box warning was is-
sued in 2018 regarding risk for aortic aneurysm or dissection and potential mental
health side effects.99 These black box warnings pertain to older adult patients
disproportionately.
For patients being admitted to the hospital, a beta-lactam plus a macrolide or doxy-
cycline are the favored combination,4,7 but local resistance patterns as well as patient-
specific risk factors will strongly impact the recommended empiric therapy (see
Table 1). The IDSA/ATS guidelines focus on previous growth of MRSA or P aeruginosa
from respiratory cultures, hospitalization with parenteral antibiotics in the past 90 days
as risk factors that should prompt broad-spectrum empiric therapy. The guidelines
also encourage the development of locally validated risk factors for MRSA or P aeru-
ginosa when selecting empiric regimens; the feasibility of this recommendation and
the potential impact on ED empiric therapy selection have just begun to be studied.100
In patients receiving empiric therapy for MRSA and P aeruginosa, it is important to
obtain sputum cultures and nasal MRSA PCR screening, which if negative may allow
de-escalation and less exposure to broad-spectrum antibiotics.
There are recent data confirming that patients meeting the IDSA/ATS criteria for se-
vere CAP4 have higher rates of positive blood cultures and higher organ failure scores
and mortality. While a resistant organism was isolated in about 10% of these cases,
which supports maintaining a low threshold for broad empiric coverage in severe
239
240
Hunold et al
Table 1
Descargado para Dr Jorge Martel Granados (emergencymedicine.peru@gmail.com) en Pontifical Xavierian
(continued )
University de ClinicalKey.es por Elsevier en agosto 21, 2024. Para uso personal exclusivamente. No se
permiten otros usos sin autorización. Copyright ©2024. Elsevier Inc. Todos los derechos reservados.
SUMMARY
The core principles of pneumonia diagnosis have not changed since 2018. However,
the literature regarding diagnostic modalities and treatment strategies is rapidly
changing. Keeping abreast of guidelines on CAP diagnosis and treatment is therefore
critical for high-quality clinical care. Clinicians should consider specific challenges in
certain populations (eg, pediatrics, geriatrics, and international travelers) as well as
patient-specific risk factors when selecting empiric antimicrobial therapy.
DISCLOSURE
Dr K.M. Hunold is funded by the NIH under award K76AG074941 and R01AG071018. Dr
N. Brummel is supported by the NIH under awards R01HD107103 and R01AG077644.
REFERENCES
1. Branch TAaHCS. National hospital Ambulatory medical care Survey: 2020 emer-
gency department summary Tables. Centers for Disease Control; 2020.
2. Lim WS, Baudouin SV, George RC, et al. BTS guidelines for the management of
community acquired pneumonia in adults: update 2009. Thorax 2009;64(Suppl
3). iii1-55.
3. Ramirez JA, Wiemken TL, Peyrani P, et al. Adults Hospitalized With Pneumonia
in the United States: Incidence, Epidemiology, and Mortality. Clin Infect Dis
2017;65:1806–12.
4. Metlay JP, Waterer GW, Long AC, et al. Diagnosis and Treatment of Adults with
Community-acquired Pneumonia. An Official Clinical Practice Guideline of the
American Thoracic Society and Infectious Diseases Society of America. Am J
Respir Crit Care Med 2019;200:e45–67.
pandemic wave from the ISARIC WHO CCP-UK study: a multicentre, prospec-
tive cohort study. Lancet Microbe 2021;2:e354–65.
25. Patton MJ, Orihuela CJ, Harrod KS, et al. COVID-19 bacteremic co-infection is a
major risk factor for mortality, ICU admission, and mechanical ventilation. Crit
Care 2023;27:34.
26. Brueggemann AB, Jansen van Rensburg MJ, Shaw D, et al. Changes in the inci-
dence of invasive disease due to Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus in-
fluenzae, and Neisseria meningitidis during the COVID-19 pandemic in 26
countries and territories in the Invasive Respiratory Infection Surveillance Initia-
tive: a prospective analysis of surveillance data. Lancet Digit Health 2021;3:
e360–70.
27. Kalil AC, Thomas PG. Influenza virus-related critical illness: pathophysiology
and epidemiology. Crit Care 2019;23:258.
28. Chadha M, Hirve S, Bancej C, et al. Human respiratory syncytial virus and influ-
enza seasonality patterns-Early findings from the WHO global respiratory syncy-
tial virus surveillance. Influenza Other Respir Viruses 2020;14:638–46.
29. Chung JR, Rolfes MA, Flannery B, et al. Effects of Influenza Vaccination in the
United States During the 2018-2019 Influenza Season. Clin Infect Dis 2020;71:
e368–76.
30. Leuchter RK, Jackson NJ, Mafi JN, et al. Association between Covid-19 Vacci-
nation and Influenza Vaccination Rates. N Engl J Med 2022;386:2531–2.
31. Gentilotti E, De Nardo P, Cremonini E, et al. Diagnostic accuracy of point-of-care
tests in acute community-acquired lower respiratory tract infections. A system-
atic review and meta-analysis. Clin Microbiol Infect 2022;28:13–22.
32. Wootton D, Feldman C. The diagnosis of pneumonia requires a chest radio-
graph (x-ray)-yes, no or sometimes? Pneumonia (Nathan) 2014;5:1–7.
33. Gezer NS, Balci P, Tuna KC, et al. Utility of chest CT after a chest X-ray in pa-
tients presenting to the ED with non-traumatic thoracic emergencies. Am J
Emerg Med 2017;35:623–7.
34. Claessens YE, Debray MP, Tubach F, et al. Early Chest Computed Tomography
Scan to Assist Diagnosis and Guide Treatment Decision for Suspected
Community-acquired Pneumonia. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2015;192:974–82.
35. Kroft LJM, van der Velden L, Giron IH, et al. Added Value of Ultra-low-dose
Computed Tomography, Dose Equivalent to Chest X-Ray Radiography, for Diag-
nosing Chest Pathology. J Thorac Imaging 2019;34:179–86.
36. van den Berk IAH, Kanglie M, van Engelen TSR, et al. Ultra-low-dose CT versus
chest X-ray for patients suspected of pulmonary disease at the emergency
department: a multicentre randomised clinical trial. Thorax 2023;78:515–22.
37. Bouam M, Binquet C, Moretto F, et al. Delayed diagnosis of pneumonia in the
emergency department: factors associated and prognosis. Front Med 2023;
10:1042704.
38. Claessens YE, Berthier F, Baque-Juston M, et al. Early chest CT-scan in emer-
gency patients affected by community-acquired pneumonia is associated with
improved diagnosis consistency. Eur J Emerg Med 2022;29:417–20.
39. Seo H, Cha SI, Shin KM, et al. Community-Acquired Pneumonia with Negative
Chest Radiography Findings: Clinical and Radiological Features. Respiration
2019;97:508–17.
40. Buhumaid RE, St-Cyr Bourque J, Shokoohi H, et al. Integrating point-of-care ul-
trasound in the ED evaluation of patients presenting with chest pain and short-
ness of breath. Am J Emerg Med 2019;37:298–303.
41. Pagano A, Numis FG, Visone G, et al. Lung ultrasound for diagnosis of pneu-
monia in emergency department. Intern Emerg Med 2015;10:851–4.
42. Murali A, Prakash A, Dixit R, et al. Lung Ultrasound: A Complementary Imaging
Tool for Chest X-Ray in the Evaluation of Dyspnea. Indian J Radiol Imaging 2023;
33:162–72.
43. Zhang D, Yang D, Makam AN. Utility of Blood Cultures in Pneumonia. Am J Med
2019;132:1233–8.
44. Joint Commission. Specifications manual for national hospital inpatient quality
measures. 2024. Available at: https://www.jointcommission.org/measurement/
specification-manuals/chart-abstracted-measures/.). [Accessed 31 January
2024].
45. Cartuliares MB, Rosenvinge FS, Mogensen CB, et al. Expiratory Technique
versus Tracheal Suction to Obtain Good-Quality Sputum from Patients with Sus-
pected Lower Respiratory Tract Infection: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Diag-
nostics 2022;12.
46. Cartuliares MB, Sundal LM, Gustavsson S, et al. Limited value of sputum culture
to guide antibiotic treatment in a Danish emergency department. Dan Med J
2020;67.
47. Kim P, Deshpande A, Rothberg MB. Urinary Antigen Testing for Respiratory In-
fections: Current Perspectives on Utility and Limitations. Infect Drug Resist
2022;15:2219–28.
48. van der Eerden MM, Vlaspolder F, de Graaff CS, et al. Comparison between
pathogen directed antibiotic treatment and empirical broad spectrum antibiotic
treatment in patients with community acquired pneumonia: a prospective rand-
omised study. Thorax 2005;60:672–8.
49. Piso RJ, Iven-Koller D, Koller MT, et al. The routine use of urinary pneumococcal
antigen test in hospitalised patients with community acquired pneumonia has
limited impact for adjustment of antibiotic treatment. Swiss Med Wkly 2012;
142:w13679.
50. Wheat LJ, Knox KS, Hage CA. Approach to the diagnosis of histoplasmosis,
blastomycosis and coccidioidomycosis. Curr Treat Options Infect Dis 2014;6:
337–51.
51. Katz SE, Williams DJ. Pediatric community-acquired pneumonia in the united
states: changing epidemiology, diagnostic and therapeutic challenges, and
areas for future research. Infect Dis Clin North Am 2018;32:47–63.
52. Self WH, Williams DJ, Zhu Y, et al. Respiratory viral detection in children and
adults: comparing asymptomatic controls and patients with community-
acquired pneumonia. J Infect Dis 2016;213:584–91.
53. Serigstad S, Knoop ST, Markussen DL, et al. Diagnostic utility of oropharyngeal
swabs as an alternative to lower respiratory tract samples for PCR-based syn-
dromic testing in patients with community-acquired pneumonia. J Clin Microbiol
2023;61:e0050523.
54. Mergenhagen KA, Starr KE, Wattengel BA, et al. Determining the utility of
methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus nares screening in antimicrobial
stewardship. Clin Infect Dis 2020;71:1142–8.
55. Smith MN, Brotherton AL, Lusardi K, et al. Systematic review of the clinical utility
of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) nasal screening for
MRSA Pneumonia. Ann Pharmacother 2019;53:627–38.
56. Tsalik EL, Rouphael NG, Sadikot RT, et al. Efficacy and safety of azithromycin
versus placebo to treat lower respiratory tract infections associated with low
74. Morimoto K, Suzuki M, Ishifuji T, et al. The burden and etiology of community-
onset pneumonia in the aging Japanese population: a multicenter prospective
study. PLoS One 2015;10:e0122247.
75. Olasupo O, Xiao H, Brown JD. Relative Clinical and Cost Burden of Community-
Acquired Pneumonia Hospitalizations in Older Adults in the United States-A
Cross-Sectional Analysis. Vaccines (Basel) 2018;6.
76. Yealy DM, Auble TE, Stone RA, et al. The emergency department community-
acquired pneumonia trial: Methodology of a quality improvement intervention.
Ann Emerg Med 2004;43:770–82.
77. Chandra A, Nicks B, Maniago E, et al. A multicenter analysis of the ED diagnosis
of pneumonia. Am J Emerg Med 2010;28:862–5.
78. Hunold KM, Schwaderer AL, Exline M, et al. Diagnosing Dyspneic Older Adult
Emergency Department Patients: A Pilot Study. Acad Emerg Med 2020;28(6):
675–8.
79. Metlay JP, Schulz R, Li YH, et al. Influence of age on symptoms at presentation
in patients with community-acquired pneumonia. Arch Intern Med 1997;157:
1453–9.
80. Grosmaitre P, Le Vavasseur O, Yachouh E, et al. Significance of atypical symp-
toms for the diagnosis and management of myocardial infarction in elderly pa-
tients admitted to emergency departments. Arch Cardiovasc Dis 2013;106:
586–92.
81. Thompson L, Wood C, Wallhagen M. Geriatric acute myocardial infarction: a
challenge to recognition, prompt diagnosis, and appropriate care. Crit Care
Nurs Clin North Am 1992;4:291–9.
82. Woon VC, Lim KH. Acute myocardial infarction in the elderly–the differences
compared with the young. Singapore Med J 2003;44:414–8.
83. Limpawattana P, Phungoen P, Mitsungnern T, et al. Atypical presentations of
older adults at the emergency department and associated factors. Arch Geron-
tol Geriatr 2016;62:97–102.
84. Peters M. The older adult in the emergency department: aging and atypical
illness presentation. J Emerg Nurs 2010;36:29–34.
85. Bourcier JE, Paquet J, Seinger M, et al. Performance comparison of lung ultra-
sound and chest x-ray for the diagnosis of pneumonia in the ED. Am J Emerg
Med 2014;32:115–8.
86. Banerjee S. Multimorbidity–older adults need health care that can count past
one. Lancet 2015;385:587–9.
87. Dharmarajan K, Strait KM, Tinetti ME, et al. Treatment for Multiple Acute Cardio-
pulmonary Conditions in Older Adults Hospitalized with Pneumonia, Chronic
Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, or Heart Failure. J Am Geriatr Soc 2016;64:
1574–82.
88. Loeb M, Bentley DW, Bradley S, et al. Development of minimum criteria for the
initiation of antibiotics in residents of long-term-care facilities: results of a
consensus conference. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2001;22:120–4.
89. Stone ND, Ashraf MS, Calder J, et al. Surveillance definitions of infections in
long-term care facilities: revisiting the McGeer criteria. Infect Control Hosp Epi-
demiol 2012;33:965–77.
90. Henig O, Kaye KS. Bacterial Pneumonia in Older Adults. Infect Dis Clin North
Am 2017;31:689–713.
91. Duong TN, Waldman SE. Importance of a Travel History in Evaluation of Respi-
ratory Infections. Curr Emerg Hosp Med Rep 2016;4:141–52.
92. Trimble A, Moffat V, Collins AM. Pulmonary infections in the returned traveller.
Pneumonia (Nathan) 2017;9:1.
93. General Approach to the Returned Traveler. 2023. (Accessed October 2023, Avail-
able at: https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/yellowbook/2024/posttravel-evaluation/
general-approach-to-the-returned-traveler.)
94. Ramirez JA, Musher DM, Evans SE, et al. Treatment of Community-Acquired
Pneumonia in Immunocompromised Adults: A Consensus Statement Regarding
Initial Strategies. Chest 2020;158:1896–911.
95. Manabe T, Teramoto S, Tamiya N, et al. Risk Factors for Aspiration Pneumonia in
Older Adults. PLoS One 2015;10:e0140060.
96. Marrie TJ. Epidemiology of community-acquired pneumonia in the elderly.
Semin Respir Infect 1990;5:260–8.
97. Makhnevich A, Feldhamer KH, Kast CL, et al. Aspiration Pneumonia in Older
Adults. J Hosp Med 2019;14:429–35.
98. Yoshimatsu Y, Aga M, Komiya K, et al. The Clinical Significance of Anaerobic
Coverage in the Antibiotic Treatment of Aspiration Pneumonia: A Systematic Re-
view and Meta-Analysis. J Clin Med 2023;12.
99. FDA In Brief. FDA warns that fluoroquinolone antibiotics can cause aortic aneurysm
in certain patients. U.S. Food & Drug Administration, 2018. 2023. Available at:
https://www.fda.gov/news-events/fda-brief/fda-brief-fda-warns-fluoroquinolone-
antibiotics-can-cause-aortic-aneurysm-certain-patients.). [Accessed 20 October
2023].
100. Frazee BW, Singh A, Labreche M, et al. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa community acquired pneumonia: Preva-
lence and locally derived risk factors in a single hospital system. J Am Coll
Emerg Physicians Open 2023;4:e13061.
101. Haessler S, Guo N, Deshpande A, et al. Etiology, Treatments, and Outcomes of
Patients With Severe Community-Acquired Pneumonia in a Large U.S. Sample.
Crit Care Med 2022;50:1063–71.
102. Dequin PF, Meziani F, Quenot JP, et al. Hydrocortisone in Severe Community-
Acquired Pneumonia. N Engl J Med 2023;388:1931–41.
103. GU Meduri, Shih MC, Bridges L, et al. Low-dose methylprednisolone treatment
in critically ill patients with severe community-acquired pneumonia. Intensive
Care Med 2022;48:1009–23.
104. Williams DJ, Creech CB, Walter EB, et al. Short- vs Standard-Course Outpatient
Antibiotic Therapy for Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Children: The SCOUT-
CAP Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Pediatr 2022;176:253–61.
105. Fluoroquinolone Antimicrobial Drugs Information. U.S. Food & Drug Adminisra-
tion 2018. 2023. Available at: https://www.fda.gov/drugs/information-drug-class/
fluoroquinolone-antimicrobial-drugs-information.). [Accessed 29 June 2023].