Abstract

Patients who suffer OHCA are at risk for early onset pneumonia due to loss of airway protection, emergency airway access and intubation, CPR, mechanical ventilation, among other complications. It is difficult to accurately diagnose early onset pneumonia post OHCA due to multi-organ dysfunction post arrest and radiography findings confounded by non-infectious inflammation from CPR and aspiration. As a result, a substantial number of patients receive empiric antibiotics. A bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) can screen for the presence of bacteria in the lungs and aid in identifying the incidence of early onset pneumonia after OHCA. We implemented a quality improvement (QI) initiative to collect a BAL on initial patient presentation to our hospital in May 2018. We conducted an observational, retrospective study to assess the impact of BAL implementation on empiric antibiotic prescribing. We used a rigorous study definition of pneumonia requiring at least two of the following positive within the same 24-hour period: BAL, chest radiography, and/or a fever >38°C. We compared rates of antibiotic prescription in the first 7 days of hospitalization for patients receiving a BAL to those without, as well as rates of antibiotic prescriptions before and after implementation of the BAL QI initiative. Implementation of initial BAL collection was successful and resulted in a 66% increase of BALs (from 44 to 73 BALs) collected compared to an average from the prior 2 years. We hypothesized rates of antibiotic prescription would decrease post-implementation of BAL collection; however, there was no statistically significant change in rate of antibiotic prescription (Figure 1) over the initial 7-day hospitalization period X 2 ( Df = 1, N = 3247) = 0.68, p = 0.54. Over 80% of patients with pneumonia received antibiotics, roughly 60% of OHCA patients received antibiotics despite no pneumonia diagnosis by any definition. Further study is needed to alter these practices and reduce antibiotic overuse.

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