Abstract

ObjectivesThe decision to admit patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) to hospital are based on stratification scales. This classification into risk groups is not perfect. In low-risk community-acquired pneumonia (LR-CAP), physicians often depend on their subjective impressions to decide the need for hospitalisation, which suggests the existence of conditions not considered by the scores. The aim of this article was to describe the determining factors for admission in LR-CAP, and to analyse the relationship between these causes and clinical outcome. Material and methodsA descriptive, observational, retrospective study, based on the review of medical records during a 2 year-period. It included patients over 18 years, who were hospitalised in a third level hospital in Argentina due to LR-CAP. ResultsA total of 80 cases were identified. The causes that led to hospitalisation were: comorbidities not included in the scores, development of pleural effusion and sepsis, lack of response to ambulatory antibiotic treatment, oral intolerance, and social causes. HIV infection was associated with an unfavourable clinical progress during hospital admission (p=.03), as well as the lack of response to outpatient treatment (p=.03) and the development of pleural effusion (p=.03). Social causes were associated with a need for longer intravenous treatment. ConclusionsHIV infection, social causes, and lack of response to ambulatory treatment were related to unfavourable clinical progress.

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