Pneumonia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Prevention of Respiratory Infections in Older Patients During and After Hospitalisation: A Randomised Controlled Trial
This randomized controlled trial in older hospitalized patients found that a respiratory care
bundle intervention did not significantly reduce the incidence of respiratory infections
compared to usual care for the index admission. However, time to next admission for
respiratory infection was significantly longer with the intervention compared to usual care.
Aim: To evaluate whether a respiratory care bundle, compared to usual care, reduces
respiratory infections during and after hospitalization.
Methods: In this open-label, single-centre randomized controlled trial, we recruited patients
>65 years of age and admitted <72 hours for non-respiratory conditions to a novel respiratory
care bundle intervention (whole bed tilt, swallow screen, chlorhexidine mouth wash, and
pneumococcal and influenza vaccinations) or usual care. Participants were followed up for 12
months. The primary endpoint was the development of respiratory infection during the index
admission. The secondary endpoint was the time to next admission for respiratory infection.
Background:
Hospital-acquired infections impact patient recovery and increase risk of deterioration.
Pneumonia is the second commonest cause of death in Singapore accounting for 19% of deaths in
2014. Hospital acquired pneumonia (HAP) or nosociomal pneumonia refers to any pneumonia
contracted by a patient in a hospital at least 48-72 hours after admission and is usually
caused by a bacterial infection, rather than a virus. It is the most prevalent
hospital-acquired infection, and has the highest mortality among the hospital-acquired
infections (20-50%) . Local audit data has shown that around 60% of deaths in hospitalised
older patients are due to pneumonia, of which a significant proportion are due to HAP or
health care associated pneumonia (HCAP).
A meta-analysis of respiratory studies has shown low numbers of studies evaluating novel
antimicrobial agents for hospital-acquired pneumonia (15.9%) suggesting further research or
novel approaches are needed. The prevalence of nosociomal pneumonia in a European study was
13.9%. Pneumonia acquired during periods of hospitalisation has a high morbidity, mortality
and increased hospital length of stay (LOS). Audit of the 2014 data from the Geriatric
Mortality meetings has shown all cause pneumonia (community acquired pneumonia (CAP) and HAP)
is 55%. Currently this data is being analysed to calculate the proportion of deaths
attributable to HAP vs CAP.
The pathophysiology of pneumonia in the elderly is primarily due to aspiration pneumonia
(ASP). ASP comprises predominantly two pathological conditions: airspace infiltration with
bacterial pathogens and dysphagia-associated aspiration. The primary route of infection is
believed to be through microaspiration of organisms that have colonised the oropharynx and
gastrointestinal tract. Hospitalised patients become colonised with microorganisms from the
hospital environment within 48 hours and severity of respiratory infection is related to the
number and virulence of these microorganisms as well as the hosts immune response.
Swallowing difficulties, poor oral hygiene and reduced immune response are inherent in the
older population contributing to an increased risk of HAP. In addition, older patients have
an increased risk of aspiration of gastric contents due to a laxity of lower oesphageal
sphincter, an anatomical sphincter that relies on diaphragmatic function. Many older patients
locally are fed via naso-gastric tube and the presence of a naso-gastric tube increases the
risk of aspiration pneumonia occuring during hospitalisation. Supine positioning also
predisposes to micro aspiration from the oropharynx and stomach with many patients placed
routinelyin a supine position to undertake their basic care needs. Positioning in the semi
recumbant position has been shown to reduce microaspiration with elevations of 30-45 degrees
by improving supraglottic drainage.
Patients cared for in intensive care units have been shown to benefit from a targeted bundle
of care that reduced ventilator associated pneumonia (VAP) and it is therefore likely that
these principles could be extended to benefit older patients. The VAP bundle includes head up
tilt (30 degrees), gastric acid suppression and good oral hygiene. In this study, gastric
acid suppression will not be used routinely as some studies have suggested that the use of
proton pump inhibitors may increase the risk of HAP. Research has shown reduced pneumonia
rates and hospital re-admissions after the implementation of good oral care methods and a
local quality improvement project (Bright Smiles) has been shown to improve the quality of
oral care in older patients. Assessment of swallowing function at an early stage within the
hospital admission offers the opportunity to identify earlier those patients with swallowing
difficulties and intervene to reduce the likelihood of aspiration.
In a Spanish prospective multicenter case-control study of patients with HCAP or CAP more
than 50% were due to streptococcus pneumoniae and the presence of multiple co-morbidities
were associated with HCAP. In older patients with multiple co-morbidities there is poor
uptake of vaccination and therefore the utilization of a vaccination programme for these
patients proposes to reduce the likelihood of re-admission due to HCAP or HAP and aims to
impact the hospital re-admission rates in geriatric patients.
The local data has identified the need for a novel approach to hospital acquired infections
and the techniques described have shown benefit in ventilated patients but this study aims to
extend the principle of preventing aspiration to a wider population of "at risk" older
patients through positioning, swallowing assessment and good oral care.
The study planned is a randomized control trial (intervention arm vs control arm) to compare
current best practice with a respiratory bundle of care.
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