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Update Community Respiratory Tract Infections Thomas M. File, Jr MD MSc MACP FIDSA FCCP Chair, Infectious Disease Division Summa Health System Akron, Ohio; Professor of Internal Medicine, Chair ID Section Northeast Ohio Medical University Rootstown, Ohio Overview 1. Increase resistance • Pneumococcus • Mycoplasma • GNR (nosocomial) 2. Pharyngitis • Fusobacterium in adolescents 3. Sinusitis-new guidelines • ?Watchful waiting 4. Pneumonia • HCAP-elimination • CAPo elimination of ‘standard’ macrolide monotherapy o New agent (Solithromycin) o Steroids for serious CAP 2 Trends in Susceptibility Rates for Antimicrobial Agents Tested Against S. pneumoniae Isolated in the United States Susceptiblity Trends 100.0 SUSCEPTIBILITY RATES (%) 90.0 80.0 70.0 60.0 50.0 40.0 30.0 20.0 10.0 0.0 A/C (≤2) PEN (≤0.06) PEN (≤2) CRO (≤1) ERY CC (≤0.25) TC (≤2) (≤0.25) 1998 (1399) 2009 (1372) TMP/SMX LEV (≤2) (≤0.5) A/C = amoxicillin/clavulanate; PEN = penicillin; CRO = ceftriaxone; LEV = levofloxacin; TC = tetracycline; TMP/SMX = trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole; ERY = erythromycin; CC = clindamycin % Susceptible by agent (MIC breakpoint in μg/mL) SENTRY Antimicrobial Surveillance Program, 1998–2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.diagmicrobio.2010.08.024 3 Keedy et al. Poster 2016 presented at IDWeek 2016 Oct . New Orleans 4 Global Prevalence of Macrolide-Resistant Mycoplasma pneumoniae1 Sporadic Reports in the US2 US City, State Isolates, # Resistance Chicago, IL 23 17.4% Kansas City, MO 40 7.5% Hackensack, NJ 2 50% New York, NY 5 40% Seattle, WA 15 6.5% Birmingham, AL 6 16.7% 91 13.2% TOTAL 1. Cao B et al. Clin Respir J. 2015 Sept 14. [Epub ahead of print] 2. Zheng X et al. Emerg Infect Dis. 2015;21:470-472. 5 You are asked to evaluate a 20 y/o college student who presents with a sore throat of 2 days duration. Afebrile. Pharynx-moderate erythema. Which of the following options is your choice of management ? A. Pen VK 500 mg bid x 10 days b. Oral cephalosporin Qd x 5 days c. Z-pac d. Rapid antigen test for S. pyogenes e. Throat culture 6 Pharyngitis •Most pharyngitis is viral o S. pyogenes (GAS)—only common etiology of pharyngitis for which antimicrobials are indicated • accounts for up to 25% in children, much less in adults o Concern for severe post-streptococcal complications • Acute rheumatic fever (risk is low in developed countries) • Acute glomerulonephritis (no evidence ATB prevents) • Local suppurative (low risk) o Other causes: GC, Mono, Mycoplasma, Grp C/G Strep, Arcanobacterium hemolyticus (unresponsive to PCN), Fusobacterium necrophorum (Lemierres syndrome) Inf Dis Soc Am Guidelines, Clin Inf Dis. 2012: available www.idsociety .org 7 Pharyngitis •Indications for antimicrobial therapy oBase on rapid antigen test or throat culture • Newer antigen tests have sensitivity approx 90% • No need to do culture for adults if antigen neg. ovs syndromic approach (Centor Score*: adenopathy, exudate, fever, lack of cough….) • Treat 3 or 4; Variable predictability • Low threshold if high risk; ie, history of recurrent GASpharyngitis or ARF; epidemic) Inf Dis Soc Am Guidelines, Clin Inf Dis. 2012: available www.idsociety .org . * Centor R Anna Intern med 2009; 151: 812 8 Grp A Strep vs Viral Pharyngitis Grp A Strep 9 Viral Inf Dis Soc Am Guidelines, Clin Inf Dis. 2012: available www.idsociety .org . IDSA Guideline: Grp A Strep Therapy b. Avoid if immediate PCN hypersensitivity; c. Resistance variable Inf Dis Soc Am Guidelines, Clin Inf Dis. 2012: available www.idsociety .org 10 17 year old male: story • • • • • • • Normal 17-year-old Day 1 – sore throat Day 2 – doc started Z-pack Day 3-6 – fevers to 102 pain & swelling Right neck Admitted for metastatic lung abscesses Day 9 – blood grew Fusobacterium necrophorum He died after 3 weeks in the ICU From Robert Centor MD Lemierre’s Presentation Sore throat 4-5 days Fever & rigors Repeated rigors Metastatic abscesses From Robert Centor MD Pharyngitis in University Health Clinic •312 students (age 15-30) •Etiology: o Fusobacterium necrophorum20.5% o Grp A Strep10.3% o Grp C/G Strep 9.0% o Mycoplasma 1.9% •Infection with F necrophorum and Grp A Strep more severe Centor et al. Ann Intern Med 2015; 162: 24113 Centor Score by Bacteria (n=312) 100% Any p < 0.001 74% 75% 50% 41% 43% 27% 25% 15% 0% 0 1 GAS 2 GCS Fuso 3 Any 4 Centor Score Chi square for trend From Robert Centor MD •F necrophorum casues pharyngitis in adolescents/young adults as common as Grp A Strep •Use a penicillin or cephalosporin or clindamycin (not macrolide) if a consideration in Strept-negative pharyngitis •Pharyngitis normally resolves in 3-5 days •2 major flags are worsening sore throat and neck swelling •Often bacteremic and toxic; may require surgical intevention Centor R. Annals Intern Med. 2009; 151: 812-815 (Dec 1) 15 Pharyngitis in the 21st century Pre-adolescents • Group A strep relatively frequent • Group C/G rare • Fusobacterium very rare • No infectious mono From Robert Centor MD Adolescents/young adults • Group A strep less common • Group C/G less common than A but still significant • Fusobacterium necrophorum most frequent bacteria • Inf mono frequent Management of Sinusitis •Acute sinusitis is generally viral – 0.5%-2% develop secondary bacterial sinusitis •Predictors of bacterial sinusitis (acute maxillary) – Symptoms >7 days; severe – Facial pain/tenderness, fever, dental pain, abnormal transillumination, intranasal pus, unresponsive to decongestants – Imaging studies not suggested for initial Rx •Most common bacterial pathogens: S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae Sinus and Allergy Health Partnership. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2004;130(Suppl 1):1-45. 17 Pathophysiology of Bacterial Sinusitis – Viral URI most common preceding cause Adapted from Gwaltney: Clin Infect Dis 23:1209-1225, 1996; Reilly: Otoloaryngol Head Neck Surg 103:856-862, 1990. 18 Radiologic Imaging: CT Photo courtesy J. Hadley, 19MD. New Guideline Recommendations (pending review and approval) The following clinical criteria (any of three) are recommended for identifying patients with acute bacterial vs. viral rhinosinusitis: Onset with persistent symptoms (nasal discharge of any quality or daytime cough or both) lasting for >10 days without any evidence of clinical improvement); – Onset with severe symptoms (purulent nasal discharge and fever or facial pain) lasting for at least 3-4 days at the beginning of illness; or – Onset with initial improvement followed by worsening of respiratory symptoms (nasal discharge or cough or new onset fever or headache) lasting for 3-4 days. – Clin Infect Dis. April, 2012 20 Rosenfeld NEJM 2016; 375: 962- New Recommendations (pending approval) • Amoxicillin-clavulanate rather than amoxicillin alone is recommended as empiric therapy in both children and adults. • “high-dose” amoxicillin-clavulanate recommended for children and adults from geographic regions with high endemic rates of penicillin-nonsusceptible S. pneumoniae, severe infection, a recent history (within 3 months) of hospitalization or antibiotic use, or those with co-morbidities • Either doxycycline (not suitable for children) or a respiratory fluoroquinolones (levofloxacin or moxifloxacin) are recommended as alternative agents for empiric initial antimicrobial therapy in patients allergic to penicillin. (macrolides or SXT/TMP NOT listed) • Recommended duration of therapy for uncomplicated ABRS in adults is 5-7 days. (Children 10-14d) 22 Augmentin XR™ • Pharmacokinetic design o o Bilayer tablets with immediate release layer of amoxicillin and clavulanate, and extended release layer of amoxicillin Each tablet contains 1 gm amox and 62.5 gm clavulanate • Increases daily dose of amoxicillin—2000 mg BID = 4000 mg/day • Maintains daily dose of clavulanate—125 mg BID = 250 mg/day • Extends coverage to include S. pneumoniae with elevated amoxicillin MICs • Indications (When PRSP is a concern): CAP; Acute Bacterial Sinusitis • Tolerability Similar to Augmentin 875 (clavulanate dose is the same) o Diarrhea approx 10% (most are mild) • Cost: 10day course $118; vs 875 mg BID X 10 d23$12.60 o Pharmacokinetic Profile Comparison: Augmentin XR™ vs. Amox/Clav 875/125 Mean amoxicillin concentration (µg/mL) 20 Amox/Clav 875/125 Augmentin XR 1000/62.5 mg, 2 tabs Augmentin XR 15 Maintains extended plasma concentrations 875mg 10 5 S. pneumoniae with amox 0 4.8 hours 7.2 hours 40% 60% MIC = 2 µg/mL Goal= 4.8 hours 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Time (hours) 40% of 12-hour dosing interval = 4.8 hours 24 8 9 10 11 12 New Recommendations 25 Other Recommendations • Intranasal saline irrigations recommended as an adjunctive treatment in patients with ABRS. Either physiologic or hypertonic saline is recommended. • Intranasal corticosteroids may be used as an adjunct to antibiotics in the empiric treatment of ABRS, particularly in those with a history of allergic rhinitis. • Neither topical nor oral decongestants and/or anti-histamines are recommended as adjunctive treatment in patients with ABRS (in placebo trials no significant benefit and causes increase in inflammation) 26 NASAL IRRIGATION: Recipe •Use a one-quart clean glass jar •Fill with water that has been distilled, boiled, or sterilized. Plain tap water is not recommended because it is not sterile. •Add 1 to 1½ heaping teaspoons of pickling/canning salt Do NOT use table salt because it contains a large numbe of additives. •Add 1 teaspoon baking soda (pure bicarbonate) •Mix ingredients together and store at room temperature. Discard after one week. from: Diseases of the Sinuses: Diagnosis and Management. Kennedy DW, Bolger WE, Zinreich SJ (Eds), BC Decker, Hamilton, Ontario 27 2001. COPD Airflow limitation/ obstruction present Bronchiectasis Emphysema Chronic bronchitis • Chronic productive cough for 3 months in each of 2 successive years • 85% of COPD AECB •Increased dyspnea •Increased sputum volume •Increased sputum purulence COPD = chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; AECB = acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis McCrory et al. Chest. 2001 Apr;119(4):1190-209 28 A Vicious Cycle of Infection and Inflammation in AECB Microbial Infection Impaired Lung Defences Inflammation Tissue Damage Cole and Wilson 29 GOLD Recommendation for Antibiotic Use in Exacerbations of COPD •Antibiotics recommendations: oPatients with 3 cardinal symptoms o2 symptoms if increased purulence is one oLength 5-10 days. oChoice based on local bacterial resistance pattern. Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease Vestbo J et al. Am J Resp Crit Care Med. 2013 187: 347-65 30 Guidelines for Management of AECB II, Chronic bronchitis w Risk factors (Complicated) III, Chronic suppurative bronchitis < 4 exacerbations/yr >4 exacerbations/yr As in group II No comorbid illness Cardiac disease FEV1 usually <35% FEV1 >50% FEV1 <50% Multiple risk factors I, Chronic bronchitis w/o risk factors (Simple) Home O2 Chronic oral steroids Ab use in past 3 mo Hemophilus, S. pneumoniae, Moraxella 2nd generation macrolide 2nd/3rd cephalosporin, Amoxicillin; Doxycycline Trimethoprim/sulfameth Plus GNRs Fluoroquinolone b-lactam/b-lactamase inhibitor Plus Pseudomonas Tailor to pathogen Ciprofloxacin Balter et al Can Respir J 2003; 1031(Suppl B): 3B-32B Community-acquired Pneumonia (CAP) • Leading cause of morbidity and mortality o 40,000 deaths/year in US o Esp. elderly and patients with comorbidities o No. I cause due to infection • Incidence o General pop.: 1−12/1000/year o > 65 years: 25−44/1000/year • 5-6 million cases/year o Approx. 1 million admissions/year (40% one year mortality; Kaplan et al. Arch Intern Med 2003; 163: 317-323) o > 75% treated as outpatients • Cost of treating CAP exceeds $17 billion/year • Performance Measures: now Only outcome-30 day mortality and readmission rate File T. Lancet 2003; File and Tan JAMA 2005 File T and Marrie T Postgrad Med. 2010 32 Types and Spectrum of Pneumonia Risk of MDR Pathogens Community -acquired pneumonia (CAP) Healthcareassociated pneumonia (HCAP) Hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP)/ ventilator-assoc pneumonia (VAP) Morbidity and Mortality Craven D. Curr Opin Infect Dis. 2006;19:153-160. HCAP: are all at risk for MDRO? • Inclusion of healthcare related pneumonia1 o o o o o o Hospitalized in the preceding 90 days Nursing home/extended care facility residence Home infusion therapy (including antibiotics) Chronic dialysis Home wound care Family member with multidrug-resistant pathogen • Prior Guideline: Treat all for MDR pathogens (But this is overgeneralization) • Increasing evidence many with HCAP NOT at risk for MDRO2-4 Large % of HCAP patients over treated for MDRO5 o Underlying patient characteristics important independent determinants o 1. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2005; 171: 388; 2.Chambers et al. Clin Infect Dis 2014; 58:330; Gross et al AAC 2014; 58:5262; 4. Yap et al. Inf Dis Clinics NA 2013; 27: 1; Webb, BJ et al. IDWeek Poster #47798, 2014 Elimination of HCAP from HAP/VAP Guidelines Risk Factors for Multidrug-Resistant Pathogens “…coverage for MDR pathogens…would likely be based on validated risk factors for MDR pathogens, not solely on whether or not the patient had previous contacts with the healthcare system…the panel unanimously decided that HCAP should not be included in the HAP/VAP guidelines.” Risk factors for MDR VAP Prior intravenous antibiotic use within 90 days Septic shock at time of VAP ARDS preceding VAP Five or more days of hospitalization prior to the occurrence of VAP Acute renal replacement therapy prior to VAP YES onset Risk factors for MDR HAP Prior intravenous antibiotic use within 90 days Risk factors for MRSA VAP/HAP Prior intravenous antibiotic use within 90 days Kalil AC, et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2016;63:e61-111. Risk factors for MDR Pseudomonas VAP/HAP Prior intravenous antibiotic use within 90 days Community-acquired Pneumonia (CAP): Case • 26 Y/O FEMALE o Healthy • Headache, Fever, Nonproductive C for 7 days • T-100.80 F; P-100; RR-24; Ausc-Bil hi-pitched rhonchi • O2 sat-98% Room Air • SHOULD SHE BE ADMITTED? • What antimicrobial(s) 36 Pneumonia Prediction Rule for Mortality Risk Assessment STEP 1 STEP 2 Yes Is the patient >50 years of age? Class II (70 points) No Does the patient have any of the following coexisting conditions: Assign points for: Yes Neoplastic disease; congestive heart failure; cerebrovascular disease; renal disease; liver disease No Does the patient have any of the following abnormalities: Class III Demographic variables (71–90 points) Comorbid conditions Physical observations Laboratory and Yes radiographic findings Altered mental status; pulse 125/min; respiratory rate 30/min; systolic blood No pressure <90 mm Hg; temperature <35ºC or 40ºC Class IV (91–130 points) Class V (>130 points) Class I Fine MJ, et al. N Engl J Med. 1997;336:243-50. 37 Prediction Rule Step 2: Algorithm Pt Characteristic Age Points No. of years (-10 for female) Cancer Liver disease CHF, CVD, Renal disease 30 20 10 RR >30/min, SBP <90 mmHg, Confusion 20 Temp <35ºC, >50ºC 15 Pulse, beats/min 10 BUN; Sodium <130 mmol/l Glucose >250 mg/dl; Hct < 30% pO2 < 60 mmHg 20 10 10 38 Prediction Rule: Risk Categories Total Points Class Mortality % How to Treat I 0.1 Outpatient 70 II 0.6 Outpatient 71-90 III 0.9-2.8 Brief hospital observation 91-130 IV 8.2-9.3 Inpatient >130 V 27.0-29.2 Inpatient ICU Risk categories according to two validation cohorts (38,039 inpatients and 2287 in- and outpatients) Fine MJ, et al. N Engl J Med. 1997;336:243-50. 39 Applying the CURB-65 Rule Group 1 CURB-65 Score Any of: Confusion* Urea >7 mmol/l Respiratory Rate ≥30/min Blood pressure (SBP <90 mmHg or DBP ≤60 mm Hg) Age ≥65 years 0 or 1 Mortality Low (1.5%) (n=324, died=5) Group 2 2 Mortality Intermediate (9.2%) (n=184, died=17) 3+ Group 3 Mortality High (22%) (n=210, died=47) Treatment Options Likely suitable for home treatment Consider hospital supervised treatment Options may include: Short stay inpatient; Hospital-supervised outpatient Manage in hospital as severe pneumonia Assess for ICU admission especially if CURB-65 score = 4 or 5 Lim WS, et al. Thorax. 2003;58:377-82. 40 CAP: EMPIRICAL THERAPY Principles •TREAT EARLY •TREAT MOST LIKELY PATHOGENS o S. pneumoniae (?Drug resistance*); H. influenzae o Atypicals—studies in North America show high prevalence (even though may not be severe, therapy reduces illness) o Others (local epidemiology) o Cannot differentiate etiology based on initial findings • FUTURE: Pathogen directed *Recent ATB (Following of ? Relevance: Recent Hospitalization; DayCare; Multiple comorbidities; Age) 41 Most Common Etiologies of CAP Ambulatory Patients Hospitalized (non-ICU)† Severe (ICU)† S. pneumoniae S. pneumoniae S. pneumoniae M. pneumoniae M. pneumoniae S. aureus H. influenzae C. pneumoniae Legionella spp. C. pneumoniae H. influenzae Gram-negative bacilli Respiratory viruses†† Legionella spp. H. influenzae Aspiration Respiratory viruses‡ Based on collective data from recent studies; †Excluding Pneumocystis spp. ‡ Influenza A and B, adenovirus, respiratory syncytial virus, parainfluenza File TM. Lancet. 2003;362:1991-2001. 42 Empiric Therapy in CAP: IDSA/ATS Healthy Outpatient Outpatient at Risk for DRSP* Inpatient, nonICU Inpatient, ICU† Macrolide OR Doxycycline Respiratory fluoroquinolone OR Beta-lactam plus macrolide Respiratory fluoroquinolone OR Beta-lactam plus macrolide Beta-lactam plus azithromycin OR Beta-lactam plus fluoroquinolone *Includes healthy patients in regions with high rates of macrolide resistance. †Treatment of Pseudomonas or MRSA is the main reason to modify standard therapy for ICU patients. ICU = intensive care unit Mandell L, et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2007;44(Suppl 2):S27-S72. 43 US FDA Issues New Warnings [Posted 05/12/2016] Fluoroquinolone Antibacterial Drugs: Drug Safety Communication – FDA Advises Restricting Use for Certain Uncomplicated Infections ISSUE: •FDA is advising that the serious side effects associated with fluoroquinolone antibacterial drugs generally outweigh the benefits for patients with sinusitis, bronchitis, and uncomplicated urinary tract infections who have other treatment options. – For patients with these conditions, fluoroquinolones should be reserved for those who do not have alternative treatment options •An FDA safety review has shown that fluoroquinolones when used systemically (i.e. tablets, capsules, and injectable) are associated with disabling and potentially permanent serious side effects that can occur together – These side effects can involve the tendons, muscles, joints, nerves, and central nervous system 44 http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsforHumanMedicalProducts/ucm500665.htm Empiric Therapy in CAP: IDSA/ATS Healthy Outpatient Outpatient at Risk for DRSP* Inpatient, nonICU Inpatient, ICU† Macrolide OR Doxycycline Respiratory fluoroquinolone OR Beta-lactam plus macrolide Respiratory fluoroquinolone OR Beta-lactam plus macrolide Beta-lactam plus azithromycin OR Beta-lactam plus fluoroquinolone *Includes healthy patients in regions with high rates of macrolide resistance. †Treatment of Pseudomonas or MRSA is the main reason to modify standard therapy for ICU patients. ICU = intensive care unit Mandell L, et al. Clin Infect Dis. 2007;44(Suppl 2):S27-S72. 45 Azithromycin and Cardiovascular Events (QT effect) • NEJM 2012 (Ray et al. Tennessee, USA) o Older population; Azithro associated with higher mortality • NEJM 2013 (Svanstrom et al. Denmark) o General population; no association with mortality • JAMA 2014 (Mortensen et al. VA database, USA) o Azithro associated with slight increase of MI but overall reduced mortality in hospitalized patients • MY TAKE: Azithro safe for general population and associated with better outcomes for hospitalized patients. Need to consider risk-benefit for patients with CV disease (QT prolongation) 46 • New Macrolide: • First Fluoroketolide; Interacts at 3 sites of Ribosome • Completed clinical trials • Oral vs moxi: • Barrera Lancet Inf Dis 2016; 16:421 • IV to oral vs moxi: • File Clin Infect Dis 2016; 63: 1007 • AEs: mild, transient LFTs; Mild IV site irritation; NO QTc, NO accommodation effect Community-acquired Pneumonia (CAP): Case • 66 Y/O MALE oSmoke, Diabetes, CHF oTreated with macrolide for ‘sinusitis’ 8 weeks ago • Headache, Fever, Cough for 3 days, New Confusion • T-101.80 F; P-110; RR-28; Auscrhonchi RLL • O2 sat-92% Room Air • SHOULD HE BE ADMITTED? • WHAT ANTIMICROBIAL CXR courtesy of T. File MD 48 Adjunctive Therapy: Glucocorticoids for CAP •Systemic adjunctive corticosteroid therapy may attenuate the inflammatory response, and by doing so decrease the frequency of ARDS, reduce the length of illness and of hospital stay, and possibly even reduce mortality. o Previous systematic reviews of randomized clinical trials have, however, failed to establish a conclusive benefit and current clinical practice guidelines do not recommend systemic corticosteroid therapy for CAP 49 Adjunctive Therapy: Glucocorticoids for CAP Impact of corticosteroids on all-cause mortality in patients hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia , by severity of pneumonia Siemieniuk R et al. Ann Intern Med. 2015; 163: 519-28 50 Glucocorticoids for CAP: UpToDate • For hospitalized patients, we suggest adjunctive glucocorticoids. o We are more likely to give glucocorticoids to more severely ill patients, and we are less likely to give glucocorticoids to patients at increased risk of adverse effects due to glucocorticoids o When we give glucocorticoids, we use methylprednisolone 0.5 mg/kg IV every 12 hours for ICU patients and prednisone 50 mg daily for general ward patients for 5 days 51 SWITCH THERAPY (IV to po) and DISCHARGE CRITERIA • Switch Therapy oWhen good clinical response, comobidities stabilized, can take po oIf pathogen identified, ‘Directed’ Therapy oIf empiric, can utilize ‘negative’ lab results to simplify therapy (e.g. if urinary antigen and blood cultures negative) •Discharge oIf VS and O2 status stable, and no unresolved comorbidities, can discharge at time of oral switch oNo value to observe in hospital for 24 h after switch • (Dunn et al. Am J Med. 1999; 106:6) 52 Short- vs Long-course Therapy for CAP •Meta-analysis (≤ 7 days vs longer) Conclusion: No difference in efficacy and safety •Based on available data o o Minimum of 5 days if afebrile by 48-72 hrs for ‘core pathogens’ Longer for other pathogens or evidence of extrapulmonary infection •S. aureus, Pseudomonas •Shorter course Therapy o Reduced resistance, AE, cost Dimopoulos 2008, p1848; Drugs; 2008: 68: 184153 Respiratory Tract Infections: Prevention •Smoking cessation •Vaccines oPneumococcal oInfluenza •Reducing effect of comorbidities* oControlling CHF, Hyperglycemia (higher mortality) oReducing swallowing disorders etc. • Brushing teeth *File and Tan JAMA 2005; 294: 2760-63. 54 Community RTIs Take-home Messages •Pharyngitis: Base therapy on antigen test (check susceptibility if erythromycin used) oConsider Lemierre’s in adolescent if really sick and with rigors •Sinusitis: New clinical guidelines; use antimicrobials only if warranted; amox/clav 1st line therapy; saline irrigation •Pneumonia: Stratify by risk factors; Newer molecular tests; treat 5 days if good response by 3 days. 55