Objectives: To compare intensivist-diagnosed ventilator-associated pneumonia (iVAP) with four established definitions, assessing their agreement in detecting new episodes. Methods: A multi-centric prospective study on pulmonary microbiota was carried out in patients requiring mechanical ventilation (MV). Data collected were used to compare hypothetical VAP onset according to iVAP with the study consensus criteria, the European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention definition, and two versions of the latter adjusted for leukocyte count and fever. Results: In our cohort of 186 adult patients, iVAPs were 36.6% (68/186, 95% confidence interval 30.0-44.0%), with an incidence rate of 4.64/100 patient-MV-days, and median MV-day at diagnosis of 6. Forty-seven percent of patients (87/186) were identified as VAP by at least one criterion, with a median MV-day at diagnosis of 5. Agreement between intensivist judgement (iVAP/no-iVAP) and the criteria was highest for the study consensus criteria (50/87, 57.4%), but still one-third of iVAP were not identified and 9% of patients were identified as VAP contrary to intensivist diagnosis. VAP proportion differed between cri-teria (25.2-30.1%). Conclusions: Caution is needed when evaluating studies describing VAP incidence. Pre-agreed criteria and definitions that capture VAP's evolving nature provide greater con-sistency, but new clinically driven definitions are needed to align surveillance and diag-nostic criteria with clinical practice. 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of The Healthcare Infection Society. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Comparison of multiple definitions for ventilator-associated pneumonia in patients requiring mechanical ventilation for non-pulmonary conditions: preliminary data from PULMIVAP, an Italian multi-centre cohort study / Alagna, L; Palomba, E; Chatenoud, L; Massafra, R; Magni, F; Mancabelli, L; Donnini, S; Elli, F; Forastieri, A; Gaipa, G; Abbruzzese, C; Fumagalli, R; Munari, M; Panacea, A; Picetti, E; Terranova, L; Turroni, F; Vaschetto, R; Zoerle, T; Citerio, G; Gori, A; Bandera, A. - In: JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL INFECTION. - ISSN 1532-2939. - 140:(2023). [10.1016/j.jhin.2023.07.023]
Comparison of multiple definitions for ventilator-associated pneumonia in patients requiring mechanical ventilation for non-pulmonary conditions: preliminary data from PULMIVAP, an Italian multi-centre cohort study
Mancabelli, L;Turroni, F;
2023-01-01
Abstract
Objectives: To compare intensivist-diagnosed ventilator-associated pneumonia (iVAP) with four established definitions, assessing their agreement in detecting new episodes. Methods: A multi-centric prospective study on pulmonary microbiota was carried out in patients requiring mechanical ventilation (MV). Data collected were used to compare hypothetical VAP onset according to iVAP with the study consensus criteria, the European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention definition, and two versions of the latter adjusted for leukocyte count and fever. Results: In our cohort of 186 adult patients, iVAPs were 36.6% (68/186, 95% confidence interval 30.0-44.0%), with an incidence rate of 4.64/100 patient-MV-days, and median MV-day at diagnosis of 6. Forty-seven percent of patients (87/186) were identified as VAP by at least one criterion, with a median MV-day at diagnosis of 5. Agreement between intensivist judgement (iVAP/no-iVAP) and the criteria was highest for the study consensus criteria (50/87, 57.4%), but still one-third of iVAP were not identified and 9% of patients were identified as VAP contrary to intensivist diagnosis. VAP proportion differed between cri-teria (25.2-30.1%). Conclusions: Caution is needed when evaluating studies describing VAP incidence. Pre-agreed criteria and definitions that capture VAP's evolving nature provide greater con-sistency, but new clinically driven definitions are needed to align surveillance and diag-nostic criteria with clinical practice. 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of The Healthcare Infection Society. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.