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Comparative Study
Validation and application of the pneumonia prognosis index to nursing home residents with pneumonia.
- J M Mylotte, B Naughton, C Saludades, and Z Maszarovics.
- Dept. of Medicine, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, State University of New York at Buffalo, Erie County Medical Center, 14215, USA.
- J Am Geriatr Soc. 1998 Dec 1; 46 (12): 1538-44.
ObjectivesTo evaluate the predictability of a pneumonia prognosis index in nursing home residents with pneumonia and to use the index to account for acute severity of pneumonia before comparing the short-term outcome of residents with pneumonia treated with intravenous antibiotic therapy in two different settings: an inpatient geriatrics unit and a nursing homeDesignA retrospective chart review of 158 episodes of nursing home-acquired pneumonia treated initially with intravenous antibiotics; 100 episodes were treated in an inpatient acute geriatrics service (AGS), and 58 were treated completely in a nursing home (Nursing Home group)SettingThe AGS is a 20-bed unit within a 400-bed, public, university-affiliated hospital. The Nursing Home group consisted of residents of two nonproprietary nursing homes.ParticipantsNursing home residents with radiographically proven pneumonia who had at least one of the following signs/symptoms: cough, fever, purulent sputum, respiratory rate > or = 25 per minute, localized auscultatory findings, or pleuritic pain.MeasurementsThe pneumonia prognosis index was calculated for each resident at the time of diagnosis of pneumonia; the index has been validated as a predictor of hospital outcome in patients with community-acquired pneumonia and is also considered a measure of acute severity of pneumonia. Status (alive or dead) of each resident at 30 days after diagnosis was the major dependent variableResultsMean (+/-SD) duration of antibiotic therapy for the Nursing Home group (10.7+/-4.5 days) was not significantly different from that of the AGS group (9.6+/-3.4 days; P = .26). The pneumonia prognosis index stratified the 158 episodes of pneumonia into low- and high-risk groups for 30-day mortality; the mortality rates in each risk strata were not significantly different from those reported in the original derivation and validation studies of the index. In addition, the distribution of episodes among the risk strata of the index was not significantly different for the two study groups, which was an indication that the two groups were similar in terms of acute severity of pneumonia. Thirty-day mortality was not significantly different between the two groups: AGS, 21% and Nursing Home, 24.1% (P = .66).ConclusionThe pneumonia prognosis index seems to have the same capability for predicting the outcome in nursing home residents with pneumonia as in residents with community-acquired pneumonia. The index is also a measure of acute pneumonia severity. Nursing home residents with pneumonia, even those who are most acutely ill, can be treated successfully with intravenous therapy in the nursing home; their 30-day mortality was no different than that of those with the same acute severity of illness who were admitted to a hospital for treatment.
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