Abstract

Endotracheal aspirate cultures are commonly collected from patients with mechanical ventilation to evaluate for ventilator-associated pneumonia or tracheitis. However, the respiratory tract is not sterile, making differentiating between colonization from bacterial infection challenging, and results may be unreliable owing to variable specimen quality and sample processing across laboratories. Despite these limitations, clinicians routinely interpret bacterial growth in endotracheal aspirate cultures as evidence of infection, sometimes regardless of organism significance, prompting antibiotic treatment. To assess the variability in endotracheal aspirate culture rates and the association between culture rates and antibiotic prescribing among patients with mechanical ventilation across children's hospitals in the US. Cross-sectional retrospective analysis of data obtained from the Children's Hospital Association Pediatric Health Information System database between January 1, 2016, through December 31, 2019. Participants were all patients hospitalized with mechanical ventilation aged less than 18 years. A charge for an endotracheal aspirate culture on a ventilated day. Endotracheal aspirate culture rate and antibiotic days of therapy per ventilated days. For mechanical ventilation, clinical transaction classification codes for mechanical ventilation other unspecified ventilator assistance were used. To identify respiratory cultures, the laboratory test code for aerobic culture was used and relevant keywords (ie, respiratory tract, sputum) were used to identify sources in the hospital charge description master. A total of 152 132 patients were identified among 31 hospitals. Among these patients, 79 691 endotracheal aspirate cultures were collected on a ventilator-day (patients aged less than 1 year, 44%; 1-4 years, 27%, 5-11 years. 16%, and 12-18 years, 13%; 3% were Asian; 17% Hispanic; 21% non-Hispanic Black; 45% Non-Hispanic White patients; 14% were other; 56% of patients were male, 44% were female). The overall median rate of culture use was 46 per 1000 ventilator-days (IQR, 32-73 cultures per 1000 ventilator-days). The endotracheal aspirate culture rate was positively correlated with the hospital's antibiotic days of therapy rate (R = 0.46; P = .009). In a multivariable model adjusting for patient-level and hospital-level characteristics and among patients with mechanical ventilation, each additional endotracheal aspirate culture was associated with 2.87 (95% CI, 2.74-3.01) higher odds of receiving additional days of therapy compared with patients who did not receive and endotracheal aspirate culture. In this study, notable variability was found in endotracheal aspirate culture rates across US pediatric hospitals and pediatric intensive care units, and endotracheal aspirate culture use was associated with increased antibiotic use. These findings suggest an opportunity for diagnostic and antibiotic stewardship to standardize testing and treatment of suspected ventilator-associated infections in pediatric patients with mechanical ventilation pediatric patients.

Highlights

  • Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is the most frequently acquired infection in patients with mechanical ventilation and the second most common nosocomial infection in the intensive care unit (ICU).[1]

  • 79 691 endotracheal aspirate cultures were collected on a ventilator-day

  • In a multivariable model adjusting for patient-level and hospital-level characteristics and among patients with mechanical ventilation, each additional endotracheal aspirate culture was associated with 2.87 higher odds of receiving additional days of therapy compared with patients who did not receive and endotracheal aspirate culture

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Summary

Introduction

Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is the most frequently acquired infection in patients with mechanical ventilation and the second most common nosocomial infection in the intensive care unit (ICU).[1]. The results from EACs are relatively nonspecific for infection and may be unreliable.[6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16] Sample collection and quality of specimens are variable, which may affect results.[16,17] Endotracheal secretion samples are from a nonsterile site, making the differentiation between colonization and infection in the culture challenging. Clinicians may misinterpret reported growth of bacteria in EAC results as being an indicator of infection and treat with antibiotics.[1,19,20] overuse of EACs may potentiate avoidable antibiotic treatment in patients with mechanical ventilation and contribute to avoidable harms such as Clostridioides difficile infections, antimicrobial resistance,[21] and adverse drug reactions.[22,23] EAC practices may vary widely within and across institutions. We aimed to characterize the variability in the rate of EAC use and assess the association between EAC use and antibiotic use across US pediatric hospitals

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