Community Acquired Pneumonia

Community Acquired Pneumonia

Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is an acute infection of the lung parenchyma occurring in a non-hospitalized individual or developing ≤48 hours of hospital admission, not residing in long-term care and without recent healthcare exposure.

Category

Definition

Clinical relevance

CAP

Outside hospital or ≤48 hr admission

Standard community pathogens

HAP

≥48 hr after admission

Higher MDR risk

VAP

≥48 hr after intubation

ICU-specific, highest MDR risk

  • Term Healthcare-associated pneumonia (HCAP) is obsolete removed due to poor specificity for MDR pathogens.

Etiology

A. Typical Bacterial Pathogens

Organism

Notes

Streptococcus pneumoniae

Most common worldwide

Haemophilus influenzae

COPD, smokers

Moraxella catarrhalis

Elderly, COPD

Staphylococcus aureus

Post-influenza, necrotizing

Gram-negative bacilli

Elderly, comorbidities

B. Atypical Pathogens

Organism

Clinical Clues

Mycoplasma pneumoniae

Young adults, dry cough

Chlamydophila pneumoniae

Mild, prolonged

Legionella pneumophila

Hyponatremia, diarrhea, confusion

C. Viral Causes

  • Influenza A/B
  • RSV
  • SARS-CoV-2
  • Adenovirus
  • Human metapneumovirus

Viral CAP often predisposes to secondary bacterial pneumonia

D. Risk-Based Pathogens

Risk Factor

Pathogen

Alcoholism

Klebsiella pneumoniae

Post-influenza

Staphylococcus aureus

Aspiration

Anaerobes

Structural lung disease

Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Immunocompromised

Pneumocystis, fungi

Pathogenesis

  1. Microaspiration of oropharyngeal flora (most common)
  2. Inhalation of aerosols
  3. Hematogenous spread (rare)
  4. Impaired host defenses:
    • Smoking
    • Alcohol
    • COPD
    • Diabetes
    • Immunosuppression

Lung Response

  • Alveolar macrophage activation
  • Cytokine release (IL-1, TNF-α, IL-6)
  • Neutrophil influx
  • Consolidation and impaired gas exchange

Clinical Features

  • Fever
  • Cough (productive or dry)
  • Dyspnea
  • Pleuritic chest pain(Suggests: lobar pneumonia, PE).
  • Hemoptysis(PE, tuberculosis, bronchiectasis)

History Clue

Think Of

Diarrhea + Hyponatremia + Confusion

Legionella pneumophila

Rust-colored sputum

Streptococcus pneumoniae

Currant jelly sputum + Alcoholic

Klebsiella pneumoniae

Post-influenza severe pneumonia

Staphylococcus aureus

Bird exposure

Chlamydia psittaci

Hotel/cruise travel

Legionella pneumophila

HIV + Dry cough + Severe hypoxemia

Pneumocystis jirovecii Pneumonia

Aspiration risk + Foul sputum

Anaerobic pneumonia

COPD/Bronchiectasis

Pseudomonas aeruginosa

TB contact + Weight loss

  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Differential Diagnosis

CAP Mimic

Key Clue

Acute heart failure

Orthopnea, elevated BNP,Usually symmetric (but asymmetric pulmonary edema may occur in patients with mitral disease).

Pulmonary embolism

Sudden onset dyspnea, pleuritic pain,Wedge-shaped pulmonary infarcts may masquerade as PNA.

Tuberculosis

Chronic symptoms (>2–3 weeks)

Lung cancer

Non-resolving pneumonia

PJP(Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia)

HIV/immunosuppression + severe hypoxemia

Diffuse alveolar hemorrhage

Hemoptysis + falling hemoglobin

Organizing pneumonia

Failure to respond to antibiotics

Aspiration pneumonitis

Aspiration event precedes symptoms

ARDS

Bilateral infiltrates with another trigger

Acute eosinophilic pneumonia

Blood eosinophils over ~300/uL (unusual for severe pneumonia)., new smoking exposure

COPD exacerbation

COPD exacerbation may clinically mimic pneumonia, including hypoxemia, fever, and sputum production. This can be nearly impossible to sort out based on history and physical examination.

atelectasis


septic pulmonary emboli

  • Diffuse infiltrates that tend to cavitate.


Diagnosis

1. Clinical Diagnosis

There is no single universally accepted diagnostic criterion for CAP. Diagnosis is based on a combination of:

  1. Compatible clinical features
  2. Radiological evidence of a new pulmonary infiltrate
  3. Exclusion of alternative diagnoses

Current recommendations from the Infectious Diseases Society of America and American Thoracic Society require demonstration of an infiltrate on chest imaging along with clinical features suggestive of pneumonia.CAP is substantially misdiagnosed. ~10-30% of patients diagnosed with CAP don’t truly have it.

2. Imaging

Chest X-ray (Mandatory)—>No infiltrate = No pneumonia (except very early disease)

Chest X-ray Finding

Likely Etiology / Clinical Significance

Lobar consolidation (Lobar pneumonia)

Common causes: Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Legionella pneumophila

Interstitial infiltrates

Suggests atypical pneumonia due to Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Chlamydia pneumoniae, viral pneumonia (e.g., influenza), or Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PJP). Noninfectious mimics include heart failure, lymphangitic carcinomatosis, and drug-induced pneumonitis.

Patchy multifocal opacities (Bronchopneumonia/Lobular pneumonia)

Seen with bronchogenic spread of infection; commonly caused by Staphylococcus aureus, H. influenzae, gram-negative bacilli, aspiration, and mixed bacterial infections.

Pleural effusion

May indicate parapneumonic effusion, empyema, tuberculosis, malignancy, or heart failure. Requires further evaluation if moderate to large.

Cavitation

Suggests necrotizing infection. Common causes include Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus spp., Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, tuberculosis, and fungal infections.

Unilateral cavity larger than surrounding infiltrate

Strongly suggests an anaerobic lung abscess, especially in patients with aspiration risk factors.

Bulging fissure sign

Classically associated with Klebsiella pneumoniae; can occasionally occur with severe Streptococcus pneumoniae infection due to marked lobar expansion.

Chest wall invasion or extension beyond lung parenchyma

Suggests fungal infection (e.g., aspergillosis, mucormycosis) or tuberculosis. CT chest with IV contrast is recommended to assess extent of invasion.

Normal or inconclusive chest X-ray despite high clinical suspicion of pneumonia

Obtain CT chest, which is significantly more sensitive for detecting infiltrates, abscesses, cavitation, pleural disease, and alternative diagnoses.

CT Chest

  • Reserved for:
    • Complications
    • Non-resolving pneumonia
    • Immunocompromised
    • Suspected malignancy
    • Unusual chest imaging (e.g., radiograph suggests nodular/cavitating pneumonia).

3. Laboratory Investigations

Routine Tests

  • CBC ( WBC / leukopenia = severe)
  • Neutrophilia with left shift
  • CRP, Procalcitonin(bacterial > viral; helps in antibiotic stewardship)
  • Renal function
  • LFTs
  • ABG (if hypoxemia)

4. Microbiological Work-up

Outpatients-Not routinely required

Hospitalized / Severe CAP

  • Sputum Gram stain & culture

Finding

Interpretation

>25 neutrophils (leukocytes) and <10 squamous epithelial cells per low-power field (LPF)

Indicates a good-quality sputum sample that is likely representative of lower respiratory tract secretions.

>10 squamous epithelial cells per LPF

Suggests significant contamination with oropharyngeal secretions; the specimen is generally considered inadequate and should be rejected.

Gram stain shows one predominant bacterial morphology in a good-quality sample

Strongly suggests that the identified organism is the likely cause of pneumonia.

Gram stain shows multiple bacterial morphologies in similar numbers

Usually reflects normal oral flora contamination and has limited diagnostic value for identifying the causative pathogen.

Scenario

Interpretation

Positive culture for S. aureus or gram-negative bacilli, but organism not seen on Gram stain of a high-quality sample

May represent airway colonization or contamination rather than true pneumonia; clinical correlation is required.

Negative culture for S. pneumoniae or H. influenzae

Does not exclude infection, because these organisms can be difficult to recover in culture, especially after prior antibiotic exposure.

  • Blood cultures (before antibiotics)
  • Urinary antigen:
    • Streptococcus pneumoniae(False-positive may occur due to pneumonia within the past several weeks, or recent pneumococcal vaccination.)
    • Legionella(A negative result doesn’t exclude legionella.)
  • Viral PCR (influenza, SARS-CoV-2)
  • Nares PCR for MRSA.
  • Fungal culture and smear should be ordered if imaging or epidemiological data suggests the possibility of a fungal pneumonia
  • Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) -Bronchoscopy is generally most valuable when pneumonia is atypical, imaging findings are unusual, or the patient is severely immunocompromised and at risk for opportunistic infections. Isolation of an organism from BAL alone should not automatically be considered proof of invasive pneumoniais because of  contamination with oropharyngeal flora(This may be reduced by the use of protected brush cultures.)


Severity Assessment

CURB-65 Score

Parameter

Point

Confusion

1

Urea >7 mmol/L

1

RR ≥30/min

1

BP <90 systolic or ≤60 diastolic

1

Age ≥65

1

Interpretation

  • 0–1: Outpatient
  • 2: Hospital admission
  • ≥3: Severe CAP ICU(ICU admission based on ATS/IDSA criteria, not CURB-65 alone)


PSI (Pneumonia Severity Index)

  • More accurate but complex
  • Preferred for mortality prediction

ATS/IDSA Severe CAP Criteria (2019)

Major Criteria (Any 1 = ICU)

  • Septic shock requiring vasopressors
  • Respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation

Minor Criteria (≥3 = ICU)

  • RR ≥30
  • PaO₂/FiO₂ ≤250
  • Multilobar infiltrates
  • Confusion
  • Uremia( BUN >20 mg/dL (>7 mM))
  • Leukopenia (WBC <4,000/mm3.)
  • Thrombocytopenia (Platelets <100,000/mm3.)
  • Hypothermia <36C.
  • Hypotension requiring fluids

Management

Empiric Antibiotic Therapy (ATS/IDSA 2019)

1. Outpatient – No Comorbidities

Drug

Dose

Duration

Comments

Amoxicillin

1 g every 8 hr

Minimum 5 days

Preferred first-line

Doxycycline

100 mg BID

5 days

Good atypical coverage

Azithromycin*

500 mg Day 1 then 250 mg daily

Total 5 days

Only if local pneumococcal resistance <25%

Azithromycin (Alternative)

500 mg daily

3 days

Acceptable regimen

*Macrolide monotherapy no longer preferred in many regions due to resistance.


2. Outpatient – With Comorbidities

(Chronic heart/lung/liver/kidney disease, diabetes, alcoholism)

Regimen Option 1

(β-Lactam + Macrolide/Doxycycline)

Drug

Dose

Amoxicillin-Clavulanate

875/125 mg BID

OR Amoxicillin-Clavulanate ER

2 g/125 mg BID

PLUS Azithromycin

500 mg Day 1 250 mg daily

OR Doxycycline

200 mg PO loading dose f/b 100 mg BID

Doxycycline is generally preferred over azithromycin 

  • Animal exposure (covers zoonotic pneumonias).
  • Low-key MRSA coverage: Patients are at moderate risk for community-acquired MRSA pneumonia, but not enough risk to justify linezolid/vancomycin.
  • Azithromycin is preferred for patients with suspected Legionella pneumonia.

Regimen Option 2

(Respiratory Fluoroquinolone Monotherapy)

Drug

Dose

Duration

Levofloxacin

750 mg daily PO

5 days

Moxifloxacin

400 mg daily PO

5–7 days


3. Inpatient – Non-Severe CAP

  • β-lactam + macrolide or Respiratory fluoroquinolone alone

Drug

Dose

Ceftriaxone

1–2 g IV daily

Cefotaxime

1–2 g IV q8h

Ampicillin-Sulbactam(poor coverage against Gram-negative bacteria.)

1.5–3 g IV q6h

PLUS Azithromycin

500 mg IV/PO daily

4. Severe CAP (ICU)

  • β-lactam + macrolide(Preferred Regimen)
    OR
  • β-lactam + fluoroquinolone

β-Lactam Options

Drug

Dose

Ceftriaxone(Good choice for severe CAP in patients without risk factors for drug-resistant organisms.)

2 g IV OD

Cefotaxime

2 g IV q8h

Ampicillin-Sulbactam

3 g IV q6h

Ceftaroline

600 mg IV q12h

Macrolide Options

Drug

Dose

Azithromycin(preferred.)

500 mg IV/PO OD

Clarithromycin

500 mg PO BID

5. MRSA Risk(uncommon cause of community-acquired pneumonia)

  • Prior MRSA infection/colonization
  • Influenza-associated pneumonia
  • Recent hospitalization + IV antibiotics (last 90 days)
  • iv drug abuse
  • Skin pustule 
  • Shorr score(emcrit)

Drug

Dose

Vancomycin

15–20 mg/kg IV q8–12 hr

OR Linezolid(Preferred-superior lung penetration)

600 mg IV/PO q12 hr

Add to standard CAP regimen.

  • MRSA PCR has an excellent negative predictive value, so a negative PCR can generally allow for discontinuation of
  • MRSA coverage should be stopped within <48 hours unless there is some objective data that the patient has MRSA (e.g., positive PCR or positive culture data).

6. Pseudomonas Risk

  • Previous Pseudomonas isolation
  • Structural lung disease (bronchiectasis)
  • Recent hospitalization with IV antibiotics
  • Severe COPD with frequent exacerbations

The DRIP score may be the best-validated strategy to determine patients at elevated risk of a drug-resistant pneumonia:

Antipseudomonal β-Lactam

Drug

Dose

Piperacillin-Tazobactam

4.5 g IV q6h

Cefepime

2 g IV q8h

Ceftazidime

2 g IV q8h

Meropenem

1 g IV q8h

Imipenem

500 mg IV q6h

PLUS

Second Drug

Dose

Levofloxacin

750 mg IV daily


Influenza-Associated Severe CAP

Drug

Dose

Oseltamivir

75 mg PO/NG BID

Duration: 5 days (longer in ICU patients may be considered)


Aspiration Severe CAP

Routine anaerobic coverage is NOT recommended unless:

  • Lung abscess
  • Empyema
  • Necrotizing pneumonia
  • Severe periodontal disease

Duration of Therapy

Latest ATS 2025 Update 

CAP Type

ATS 2025 Recommendation

Outpatient CAP reaching clinical stability

<5 days may be sufficient (minimum 3 days)

Non-severe inpatient CAP reaching clinical stability

<5 days may be sufficient (minimum 3 days)

Severe CAP

≥5 days recommended

ATS/IDSA 2019 Guideline

Situation

Recommended Duration

Most adults with CAP (outpatient or inpatient)

Minimum 5 days

Stop antibiotics only if clinical stability achieved

≥5 days + clinically stable

Severe CAP, slow response, complications, MDR pathogens

Longer duration (7–14 days or individualized)

When to Extend Therapy Beyond 5 Days

Condition

Typical Duration

Severe CAP with slow clinical improvement

7–10 days

Bacteremic pneumococcal pneumonia

Usually 7 days

MRSA pneumonia

7–21 days (commonly 7–14 days)

Pseudomonas pneumonia

7–14 days

Lung abscess

3–6 weeks

Necrotizing pneumonia

2–4 weeks

Empyema

2–6 weeks (with drainage)

Meningitis, endocarditis, metastatic infection

Pathogen-specific prolonged therapy

Adjunctive Therapies

Therapy

Recommendation 

Corticosteroids(Controversial)

Not recommended routinely in CAP (ATS/IDSA 2019). No benefit in most patients and may cause hyperglycemia, secondary infections, delirium, and GI bleeding. Use only when another indication exists, such as refractory septic shock ,acute COPD exacerbation, asthma exacerbation, adrenal insufficiency, or other established indications. May Recommended in severe CAP(Hydrocortisone showed benefit in the CAPE-COD trial.hydrocortisone 50 mg IV q6hr was tapered off within 8-14 days, depending on whether the patient was improving after four days ). Avoid routine use in influenza,funal,T.B pneumonia.

Chest Physiotherapy

Not routinely recommended in uncomplicated CAP. May be considered in selected patients with copious secretions, neuromuscular weakness, ineffective cough, bronchiectasis, or mucus retention, especially in ICU patients. Includes postural drainage, percussion, vibration, assisted coughing, and airway clearance techniques.

Mucolytics (N-acetylcysteine, Carbocisteine, Ambroxol, etc.)

Routine use is not recommended because evidence for improved outcomes is limited. May be considered in selected patients with thick tenacious sputum causing difficulty in expectoration.

Oxygen Therapy

Recommended for hypoxemic patients. Target SpO₂ 92–96% in most patients. In chronic hypercapnic respiratory failure (e.g., COPD), target 88–92%.

Bronchodilators (Salbutamol, Levosalbutamol, Ipratropium)

Not routinely indicated in CAP. Use only when there is evidence of bronchospasm.

Nebulized/Inhaled Budesonide

No routine role in CAP treatment. May be used if the patient has coexisting asthma, COPD exacerbation, eosinophilic airway disease, or another established indication.

  • The FLORALI trial suggested improved mortality among patients with severe hypoxemia treated with HFNC.
  • HFNC should be considered in patients with significant work of breathing and/or tachypnea. The goal of HFNC is to reduce the work of breathing and thereby prevent patients from tiring out. For this to be effective, HFNC must be initiated before the patient becomes exhausted.
  • BiPAP doesn’t allow patients to clear their secretions. Patients treated on BiPAP often do well initially, but eventually may fail due to retained secretions and mucus plugging.

Complications

Pulmonary

  • Parapneumonic effusion
  • Empyema
  • Lung abscess
  • ARDS

Systemic

  • Sepsis
  • Septic shock
  • AKI
  • Multiorgan failure

Non-Resolving Pneumonia

Defined as:

  • No clinical improvement after 48–72 hrs
  • Radiological non-resolution after 6–8 weeks

Causes:

  • Wrong diagnosis
  • Resistant organisms
  • Tuberculosis
  • Malignancy
  • Pulmonary embolism

Negative procalcitonin (<0.25 ng/ml) after three days suggests the presence of a non-infectious complication, whereas persistently elevated procalcitonin suggests active infection.


Prevention

Vaccination

  • Pneumococcal vaccine
    • PCV13 + PPSV23 (as per age/risk)
  • Influenza vaccine (annual)
  • COVID-19 vaccination

Risk Factor Control

  • Smoking cessation
  • Alcohol moderation
  • Chronic disease control

REFERENCES

  • Irwin and Rippe’s Intensive Care Medicine 9TH edition
  • Washington manual 4th edition
  • ISCCM ICU Protocols 3rd edition
  • Emcrit-IBCC

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