Community-Acquired Pneumonia in the Immunocompromised Host: Epidemiology and Outcomes

Author:

Ramirez Julio A12ORCID,Chandler Thomas R1,Furmanek Stephen P1,Carrico Ruth1,Wilde Ashley M1,Sheikh Daniya2,Ambadapoodi Raghava2,Salunkhe Vidyulata2,Tahboub Mohammad2,Arnold Forest W2,Bordon Jose3,Cavallazzi Rodrigo4,Abbas Mohammed Khalid Abdulaziz,Abdelhaleem Ahmed,Adigun Aisha Olanike,Akbar Usman Ali,Akinti Oluwasegun,Ali Ahmed,Ambadapoodi Raghava Sekhar,Anwer Javaria,Bahram Saman,Bamboria Aditya,Bhandari Laxman,Deepti FNU,Ekabua Joanna,Elseidy Sheref Abdelgawad Hassan,Fatima Aiman,Fatima Farwah,Gulati Shivam,Hassan Syed,Khurana Shriya,Masthan Shameera,Mohamed Rehab Salah,Moorthy Vivek Soorya Sathya,Mumtaz Amal,Naeem Aleena,Poladi Keerthi,Puga Sanchez Lucia,Qureshi Adnan,Raut Prasanna,Salunkhe Vidyulata,Samanapally Harideep,Sekaran Balaji Srinivasa,Shah Syed Zain,Sheikh Daniya,Tahboub Mohammad,Vijayan Rupalakshmi,Vorla Mounica,Yadav Sudeep,Zamani Zarlakhta,

Affiliation:

1. Norton Infectious Diseases Institute, Norton Healthcare , Louisville, Kentucky , USA

2. Division of Infectious Diseases, School of Medicine, University of Louisville , Louisville, Kentucky , USA

3. Washington Health Institute , Washington, DC , USA

4. Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Disorders, School of Medicine, University of Louisville , Louisville, Kentucky , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background The epidemiology and outcomes of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) in immunocompromised hosts (ICHs) are not well defined. The objective of this study was to define the epidemiology and outcomes of CAP in ICHs as compared with non-ICHs. Methods This ancillary study included a prospective cohort of hospitalized adult Louisville residents with CAP from 1 June 2014 to 31 May 2016. An ICH was defined per the criteria of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Geospatial epidemiology explored associations between ICHs hospitalized with CAP and income level, race, and age. Mortality for ICHs and non-ICHs was evaluated during hospitalization and 30 days, 6 months, and 1 year after hospitalization. Results A total of 761 (10%) ICHs were identified among 7449 patients hospitalized with CAP. The most common immunocompromising medical conditions or treatments were advanced-stage cancer (53%), cancer chemotherapy (23%), and corticosteroid use (20%). Clusters of ICHs hospitalized with CAP were found in areas associated with low-income and Black or African American populations. Mortality by time point for ICHs vs non-ICHs was as follows: hospitalization, 9% vs 5%; 30 days, 24% vs 11%; 6 months, 44% vs 21%; and 1 year, 53% vs 27%, respectively. Conclusions Approximately 1 in 10 hospitalized patients with CAP is immunocompromised, with advanced-stage cancer being the most frequent immunocompromising condition, as seen in half of all patients who are immunocompromised. Risk for hospitalization may be influenced by socioeconomic disparities and/or race. ICHs have a 2-fold increase in mortality as compared with non-ICHs.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Oncology

Reference23 articles.

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