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The Microbial Etiology of Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Adults: from Classical Bacteriology to Host Transcriptional Signatures

Naomi J. Gadsby, Daniel M. Musher

2022Clinical Microbiology Reviews120 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

and pneumococcus. The low yield of bacteria in recent studies is due to the failure to obtain valid sputum samples before antibiotics are administered. The use of high-quality sputum specimens enables identification of recognized ("typical") bacterial pathogens as well as a role for commensal bacteria ("normal respiratory flora"). Nucleic acid amplification technology for viruses has revolutionized diagnosis, showing the importance of viral pneumonia leading to hospitalization with or without coinfecting bacterial organisms. Quantitative PCR study of sputum is in its early stages of application, but regular detection of high counts of bacterial DNA from organisms that are not seen on Gram stain or grown in quantitative culture presents a therapeutic dilemma. This finding may reflect the host microbiome of the respiratory tract, in which case treatment may not need to be given for them. Finally, host transcriptional signatures might enable clinicians to distinguish between viral and bacterial pneumonia, an important practical consideration.

Topics & Concepts

BacteriologyEtiologyPneumoniaHost (biology)MicrobiologyBiologyCommunity-acquired pneumoniaHost responseMedicineImmunologyBacteriaEcologyPathologyGeneticsInternal medicineImmune systemPneumonia and Respiratory InfectionsNosocomial Infections in ICU
The Microbial Etiology of Community-Acquired Pneumonia in Adults: from Classical Bacteriology to Host Transcriptional Signatures | Litcius