# Improvement in Diagnosis and Management of Nosocomial Pneumonias in a Cardiovascular Surgery Intensive Care Unit: A Multidisciplinary Approach

**Authors:** Kirstin J. Kooda, Alejandra A. Zambrano, Dylan L. Kosaski, Leah Higbe, William Brian B. Beam, J. Kyle K. Bohman, Erica D. Wittwer, Steven D. Brady, Allison M. LeMahieu, Madiha Fida, Aditya Shah

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics13070590 · Antibiotics · 2024-06-26

## TL;DR

A new protocol for diagnosing and treating hospital-acquired pneumonia in a heart surgery ICU improved diagnostic accuracy and antimicrobial use without harming patients.

## Contribution

A multidisciplinary protocol improved diagnosis and management of nosocomial pneumonias in a cardiovascular surgery ICU.

## Key findings

- Appropriate diagnostic testing increased from 23% to 54% after protocol implementation.
- Positive culture rates improved from 32% to 55% post-protocol.
- The protocol led to laboratory cost savings and better antimicrobial stewardship.

## Abstract

Background: While criteria for the diagnosis of nosocomial pneumonias exist, objective definitions are a challenge and there is no gold standard for diagnosis. We analyzed the impact of the implementation of a logical, consensus-based diagnostic and treatment protocol for managing nosocomial pneumonias in the cardiovascular surgery intensive care unit (CVS-ICU). Methods: We conducted a quasi-experimental, interrupted time series analysis to evaluate the impact of a diagnostic and treatment protocol for nosocomial pneumonias in the CVS-ICU. Impacts were measured relative to patient outcomes, diagnostic processes, and antimicrobial stewardship improvement. Descriptive statistics were used to analyze results. Results: Overall, 35 pre-protocol and 39 post-protocol patients were included. Primary clinical variables suggesting pneumonia in pre- and post-protocol patients were new lung consolidation (50% vs. 71%), new leukocytosis (59% vs. 64%), and positive culture (32% vs. 55%). Appropriate diagnostic testing improved (23% vs. 54%, p = 0.008) after protocol implementation. The proportion of patients meeting the criteria for nosocomial pneumonia (77% vs. 87%) was not statistically significant, though more patients in the post-protocol group met probable diagnostic criteria (51% vs. 77%). Duration of therapy was not significantly different (6 days [IQR = 5.0, 10.0] vs. 7 days [IQR = 6.0, 9.0]). Conclusions: The implementation of a diagnostic and treatment protocol for management of nosocomial pneumonias in the CVS-ICU resulted in improved diagnostic accuracy, advanced antimicrobial and diagnostic stewardship efforts, and laboratory cost savings without an adverse impact on patient-centered outcomes.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Nosocomial Pneumonias (MESH:D000077299), pneumonia (MESH:D011014), leukocytosis (MESH:D007964), lung consolidation (MESH:D008171)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

19 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11274194/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11274194