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Anales de Medicina Interna

versión impresa ISSN 0212-7199

Resumen

APOLINARIO HIDALGO, R.  y  GRUPO DE TRABAJO DE ENFERMEDADES INFECCIOSAS DE LA SOCIEDAD ESPANOLA DE MEDICINA INTERNA et al. Prognostic factors in community acquired pneumonia: Prospective multicenter study in Internal Medical Departments. An. Med. Interna (Madrid) [online]. 2007, vol.24, n.10, pp.467-472. ISSN 0212-7199.

Aims: the aims of the present study were to evaluate the clinical and microbiological characteristics of patients suffering from community-acquired pneumonia attended in the Internal Medical Departments of several Spanish institutions and to analyze those prognostic factors predicting thirty-day mortality in such patients. Material and methods: Past medical history, symptoms and signs, radiological pattern and blood parameters including albumin and C Reactive Protein, were recorded for each patient. Time from admission to starting antibiotics (in hours) and follow-up (in days) were also recorded. Patients were stratified by the Pneumonia Severity Index in five risk classes. Results: 389 patients were included in the study, most of them in Fine categories III to V. Mortality rate for all patients was 12.1% (48 patients), increasing up to 40% in Fine Class V. Neither age, sex nor time from admission to the start of antibiotic treatment predicted survival rates. Plasmatic levels of PCR or microbiologic diagnosis were not related to clinical outcome. In the Cox regression analysis, oriented patients (OR 0.138, IC95% 0.055-0.324), and those with normal albuminemia (OR 0.207, IC95% 0.103-0.417) showed better survival rates. On the contrary, those with active carcinoma (OR 3.2, IC95% 1.181-8.947) significantly showed a reduced life expectancy. Conclusion: Besides the fully accepted Fine scale criteria, albumin measurements should be included in routine evaluation in order to improve patient's prognostic classification.

Palabras clave : Community acquired pneumonia; Prognostic factors.

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