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Review ArticleReview

The Vexing Problem of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia: Observations on Pathophysiology, Public Policy, and Clinical Science

Richard H Kallet
Respiratory Care October 2015, 60 (10) 1495-1508; DOI: https://doi.org/10.4187/respcare.03774
Richard H Kallet
Respiratory Care Services, Department of Anesthesia, University of California, San Francisco at San Francisco General Hospital, San Francisco, California.
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Abstract

Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is an acquired infection related primarily to the consequences of prolonged endotracheal intubation. It is considered the most important infectious challenge in the critical care setting. Preventable complications of hospital care are considered an important source of wasted health-care costs believed to consume up to 47% of annual expenditures in the United States. Whether VAP is preventable has become a highly contentious debate since public reporting commenced a decade ago. This selective review focuses on specific aspects of this debate, including the inherent vagaries in the diagnosis of VAP and the marked disparities between VAP rates based on clinical diagnosis versus surveillance data. Also discussed is how this debate has impacted public policy, leading to the new paradigm of ventilator-associated events. The limited ability of artificial airways to prevent microaspiration and biofilm build-up, as well as non-modifiable conditions increasing the risk of VAP, is described in detail. In addition, the origins of the mistaken but widely embraced notion that zero VAP is a realistic achievement are examined.

  • artificial airway
  • endotracheal tube
  • microaspiration
  • ventilator-associated pneumonia
  • ventilator-associated events

Introduction

Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) is an acquired infection not present (or incubating) at the initiation of mechanical ventilation; therefore, it is defined as pneumonia that occurs > 48 h after intubation.1 Insertion of an endotracheal tube (ETT) inadvertently colonizes the lower respiratory tract,2 and its presence inhibits natural defense mechanisms that prevent infection. The ETT reduces tracheobronchial mucus flow by half, resulting in retained secretions and the development of pneumonia.3,4 VAP is caused primarily by microaspiration of infected oropharyngeal secretions pooled above the ETT cuff and represents the most important infectious challenge in the critical care setting.5 Both the incidence of VAP and attributable mortality are difficult to discern, but are estimated to occur in 9–28% of mechanically ventilated patients,6 with an attributable mortality of 3–17%.7 VAP has been estimated to prolong the duration of mechanical ventilation by up to 11 d, increase hospitalization stay by 6–25 d, and incur additional expenditures ranging from $12,000 to $40,000 per episode.1,8–14

Annual health-care costs in the United States are approximately $2–2.7 trillion (17% of the gross domestic product), but these expenditures do not improve patient outcomes relative to other advanced nations that spend substantially less on health care.15,16 Between 21 and 47% of these expenditures are believed to be consumed by waste,15 with preventable complications being an obvious source. Within this context, < 1% of total health-care expenditures in the United States are devoted to technology assessment geared toward evaluating interventions that improve value to both consumers and payers.16 To deal with this, the United States has been moving inexorably toward applying the principles of value engineering and value analysis (originally developed by manufacturers in the 1940s) to the health-care industry.16 This has been a catalyst for health-care reform and a shift from a volume-based payment (ie, fee-for-service) to a pay-for-performance scheme. A prominent focus in value analysis is interventions aimed at reducing medical complications.

A major effort to reduce preventable morbidity and mortality in health-care delivery has been spearheaded in part by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement. One of its areas of focus has been preventing VAP through the implementation of bundled care.17 However, these initiatives have engendered considerable controversy, in particular, how evidence concerning the nature of VAP and its response to prevention strategies has been interpreted and, in turn, has influenced recent health-care policy proposals.

This review focuses on specific areas concerning VAP. These include the limitations of diagnosing VAP and how this informs the tension between clinical and administrative data, as well as explaining why the new paradigm of ventilator-associated events (VAE) was necessary. Central to this discussion is how recent trends in health-care benchmarking and proposed reimbursement strategies may negatively impact hospitals, particularly those institutions providing care primarily to high-risk populations (eg, major urban public hospitals, academic referral hospitals, and trauma centers). In recent years, a misguided expectation has emerged among health-care administrators and public policy officials alike that VAP rates can be brought to zero. Properly evaluating the feasibility of this expectation requires discussing the key determinants of VAP: the limitations imposed by the artificial airway, as well as the impact of both modifiable and non-modifiable risk factors. Finally, some observations will be offered on the dubious and uniquely American notion of eradicating (zapping) VAP.

Inherent Limitations in Diagnosing Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia

One cannot discuss what VAP means for our patients and hospitals until one determines how to diagnose and track it—Shorr et al11

Simply labeling an event ‘VAP’ does not make it so—Magill et al18

The clinical diagnosis of VAP is highly inaccurate, as ∼50% of cases show no evidence of pneumonia at autopsy.19 Likewise, in some studies, up to 60% of clinically diagnosed VAP could not be confirmed by microbiological cultures.1,20 Substantial over-diagnosis (58%) of VAP has also been reported when clinically diagnosed cases are subsequently adjudicated by expert, multidisciplinary committees.21 This is because clinical criteria used to diagnose VAP are partly based upon non-specific signs common to other conditions (eg, ARDS, sepsis, trauma), whereas other signs are inherently subjective (eg, changes in sputum characteristics and chest radiographs, deteriorating oxygenation). Even when these clinical signs are conjoined with microbiological data, the estimated VAP rate varies widely.22 The problem of diagnosing VAP is complicated further because positive microbiological findings from sputum cultures are not definitive for diagnosing pneumonia.22 In some reports, negative sputum cultures missed between 15 and 56% of pneumonias discovered at autopsy.23,24

Moreover, VAP can be confused with ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis, which is a nosocomial infection of the tracheobronchial tree, but not the lung tissue itself.10 Ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis has the same clinical and microbiological signs as VAP, but without deteriorating oxygenation and chest radiographic findings. However, it can be misdiagnosed as VAP when it coincides with other pulmonary conditions such as atelectasis or pulmonary edema. Between 10 and 30% of ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis cases eventually develop into VAP.6

Controversy exists over the actual incidence of VAP. In particular, there is considerable tension between clinical criteria (used prospectively to guide therapy) developed by the 2005 American Thoracic Society/Infectious Diseases Society of America (ATS/IDSA) guidelines25 and administrative methods (used retrospectively for surveillance) based on criteria developed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/National Healthcare Safety Network (CDC/NHSN) (Table 1).26–29 Both methods rely upon subjective components in the diagnostic criteria. However, VAP rates determined by CDC/NHSN criteria are systematically lower compared with those based upon ATS/IDSA criteria (1.2 vs 8.5 cases/1,000 ventilator days).26

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Table 1.

Comparison of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia Criteria: 2005 ATS/IDSA vs CDC/NHSN

These discrepancies are not surprising as surveillance definitions were not designed for clinical care. An additional problem is that inter-rater reliability bedevils the capability to accurately track the incidence of VAP. For example, when infection-control personnel evaluated either the same medical records or hypothetical cases of possible VAP (using CDC/NHSN surveillance criteria), the level of agreement ranged from poor (62% agreement) to no-better-than-a-coin flip.28,30 It is important to emphasize this discrepancy: because there is no reference standard for diagnosing VAP, a value judgment cannot be made regarding the accuracy of diagnoses made by either physicians or infection-control specialists.30

The core issue in the clinical diagnosis of VAP is that delays in initiating appropriate antibiotic therapy are associated with increased morbidity and mortality.31 Therefore, when VAP is suspected, clinicians are compelled to begin antibiotics promptly, before microbiological confirmation.32 In consequence, physician documentation of VAP that accompanies the initiation of (or adjustment to) antibiotic therapy (and is also used in coded data for reimbursement purposes) comes at the expense of over-diagnosis. Furthermore, it is presumptuous to assume that all clinicians employ uniform criteria when diagnosing VAP, let alone apply these criteria in a rigorously consistent and precise manner. Consequently, there is likely to be a considerable degree of diagnostic variability within coded data.

Socioeconomic Context of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia Reporting

In a society where consumers consult restaurant ratings before making dinner reservations, the drive for hospital ratings is already palpable—Uçkay et al33

Historically, hospital-acquired infections were not considered preventable, and their consequences were limited to intra-institutional monitoring.34 Now that hospital-acquired infections are publically reported through the NHSN,2,32 VAP is considered to be a relative medical error with predictable consequences.11 Recently, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) considered designating VAP as a non-reimbursable event, whereas The Joint Commission considered incorporating VAP into both the rating and accreditation of hospitals.26,28,33,34 This would have a profoundly negative impact on the reputation of hospitals with significant economic consequences.

Since public reporting of VAP surveillance rates to the CDC/NHSN began a decade ago, there has been a steady and marked decrease in the incidence of VAP (Fig. 1). Curiously, this has occurred without a corresponding reduction in antibiotic usage.27 More than 50% of non-academic medical ICUs are now reporting VAP rates of zero.35 The response to these trends in the medical literature has been one of pervasive skepticism.26,27,33,36–51 In fact, VAP experts have pointedly criticized the growing misperception that administrative surveillance methods reflect the true incidence of ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis/VAP.29 This skepticism is buttressed by observations that validation studies examining surveillance techniques have found that infection-control surveyors miss almost one third of VAP cases.27

Fig. 1.
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Fig. 1.

Relationship between ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) cases and public reporting of VAP to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). MICU = medical ICU. SICU = surgical ICU.

There is speculation that increased pressure from public-reporting requirements in the United States has, at best, induced a bias toward very conservative interpretation of subjective elements used in surveillance criteria11,36,37,46 and, at worst, has raised suspicion that some institutions are gaming the system.18,48 A recent study by the International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium (INICC) that used the CDC/NHSN diagnostic criteria (and employed intensive preventive measures) reported a 22% relative reduction in VAP; nonetheless, VAP rates remained 5 times higher than in the United States.45 Interestingly, the INICC post-intervention rates are similar to those reported in Europe, where, until approximately 2012, public reporting of VAP was not required in many countries (Fig. 2).44 Given the simplicity of VAP prevention measures, the stark contrast in VAP incidence between the United States and the rest of the world invites skepticism.

Fig. 2.
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Fig. 2.

Comparison of ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) rates publically reported in the United States with those in European and other comparable nations. Data from Reference 37. MICU = medical ICUs. SICU = surgical ICUs. INICC = International Nosocomial Infection Control Consortium.

Ventilator-Associated Events as a Potential Solution

The truth is that it might be possible to achieve an apparent VAP rate of zero by maximally exploiting the subjectivity and inconsistencies of VAP definitions—Klompas et al50

Benchmarking health-care performance on the basis of best practices has reasonable validity for unambiguous problems (eg, pressure ulcers, falls). However, the situation is qualitatively different with VAP, wherein “the key to benchmarking has to be a defined, unequivocal diagnosis.”33 Yet the diagnostic accuracy of VAP is poor, and irrespective of preventive measures, the incidence is highly dependent upon non-modifiable patient risk factors.1 Thus, VAP is widely viewed as an unreliable measure of a hospital's quality of care.28,33,39,43 In particular, public hospitals providing care to patients at high risk for VAP (eg, trauma, neurologically injured, immunocompromised, poor health associated with poverty, alcoholism) are likely to be penalized.39

Because of these concerns, the National Quality Forum (used by the CMS for selecting health-care quality-reporting measures) requested that the CDC propose a new VAP surveillance scheme.34 In fact, the CMS decided not to include VAP in its in-patient quality reporting because of protests from the health-care professions.51 After several failed attempts by the CMS to develop a satisfactory new surveillance method on their own, the Department of Health and Human Services then approached the CDC and the Critical Care Societies Collaborative.51 Both groups, along with representatives from the IDSA, convened a Surveillance Definition Working Group in 2011 to develop a more credible VAP definition for use by the NHSN.18

After further testing and iterations are completed, the new NHSN surveillance criteria might be used for public reporting and perhaps pay-for-performance.34 The new surveillance concept and definition of VAE were published in 2012. The focus has been shifted away from VAP and broadened toward generalized complications of critical illness manifested as deteriorating lung function in mechanically ventilated patients. The intention of VAE is to make surveillance as objective as possible so as to facilitate automation, improve comparability between institutions, and ostensibly lessen the ability to game the system.35 More importantly, when coupled with measures of severity-of-illness scores, these new definitions might allow for credible risk adjustments when hospitals are benchmarked against one another.35

In the new VAE model, before considering VAP as a diagnosis, certain precursor clinical events must be fulfilled. These include specific objective criteria related to deterioration in lung function (ventilator-associated condition [VAC]) and its coincidence with both laboratory values and institution of (or changes in) antibiotic administration (infection-related, ventilator-associated complication [IVAC]).18 Both VAC and IVAC constitute a VAE and are intended for public-reporting purposes.18 Once these conditions have been met, varying levels of microbiological evidence that appear within 2 d prior to or following deterioration in pulmonary function are used to make a diagnosis of either possible or probable VAP (Fig. 3). Both possible and probable VAP will likely be limited to intra-institutional quality-improvement measurements.

Fig. 3.
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Fig. 3.

Flow diagram for determining a ventilator-associated event. WBC = white blood cells. BAL = bronchoalveolar lavage.

Initial Studies on Ventilator-Associated Event Surveillance

So with VAE surveillance, we do not know what we are detecting or what to do about it, but we can detect it faster and easier—Wunderink et al48

Several studies have assessed the likely impact of VAE on public reporting. A retrospective 6-y study of 20,000 subjects at a large urban hospital and level I trauma center reported the prevalence of VAC of between 5 and 10% with a corresponding incidence density of between 10 and 16 cases/1,000 ventilator days for medical, surgical, and neurologically injured subjects.48 The corresponding IVAC rate was ∼2–4% with an incidence density of 4–7 cases/1,000 ventilator days. In a prospective surveillance study of 2,300 subjects at 2 Dutch hospitals, the prevalence of VAC was 7% with an incidence density of 10 cases/1,000 ventilator days, and that of IVAC was 3% with 4.2 cases/1,000 ventilator days.52 Similar findings were also reported in a 7-y retrospective study of the Mayo Clinic's medical ICUs with VAC and IVAC rates of 11% and 4%, respectively,46 and in a retrospective multi-center study of 1,320 subjects with VAC and IVAC prevalence of ∼11% and 5%, respectively.53 Most importantly, VAE captured a distinct subset of subjects who had higher morbidity and mortality.53,54

There is a concern over of the wisdom of unlinking VAP surveillance from clinical management of patients with suspected VAP, particularly as improved antibiotic stewardship has been projected as a potential benefit of the new classification schema.48 The concordance between VAE and VAP appears dubious. Klein Klouwenberg et al52 reported that the VAE algorithm captured, at best, only 32% of prospectively identified cases of VAP. Chang et al55 found a progressively weakened associated between VAE criteria and VAP wherein VAC and IVAC captured 33% and 24% of VAP identified by an expert review committee, respectively, whereas the agreement with possible and probably VAP designations was only 12% and 1%. Likewise, Stoeppel et al56 reported that VAE definitions failed to identify a substantial number of surgical subjects with VAP because these subjects never had a period of stable/decreasing oxygenation requirements. These findings are supported by other evidence that VAE underestimate the incidence of pneumonia,46,53 thus reinforcing the longstanding controversy that surveillance data systematically underestimate the clinical incidence of VAP.

As the evidence presented above suggests, the interpretation and suitability of VAE for benchmarking hospital quality of care have yet to be established. Moreover, because VAE reflect a broad range of clinical conditions, it is currently unknown if any of the underlying causes leading to VAE can be affected by preventive measures.52 For instance, a high incidence of VAE occurs on mechanical ventilation days 3–4, which suggests that early VAE likely represent the progression of underlying disease processes and not necessarily a reflection of inadequate care.52,57,58 As an example, the pathologic evolution of pulmonary contusion (itself a risk factor for pneumonia) typically reaches peak pulmonary decompensation at ∼72 h post-injury.59 Another issue is that the results of VAE monitoring will differ depending on whether data are collected electronically or manually and particularly on the intensity of electronic data capture.52

More importantly, retrospective studies suggest that VAP prevention bundles do not affect the incidence of VAE.46,53,57 This is not unexpected, as VAE capture both infectious and non-infectious causes of respiratory deterioration, as well as infectious complications not emanating from the lungs. These findings coincide with the National Quality Forum's decision to unendorse the Institute for Healthcare Improvement's ventilator bundle in 2013.49

Pathophysiology of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia: Microaspiration and Endotracheal Tube Design

VAP is directly related to the duration of mechanical ventilation; the risk is ∼3%/d during the first 5 d, 2% on days 6–10, and 1%/d thereafter.1,60 Late-onset VAP (occurring on or after 5 d of mechanical ventilation) is caused primarily by pathogenic Gram-negative bacteria associated with greater morbidity and mortality.61 It accounts for 62–73% of all cases, with the highest daily hazard rates of 2–4% reported to occur between days 6 and 8.61–63

Whether VAP can be eradicated requires discussion of both VAP pathophysiology and ETT design limitations. To begin with, terms such as VAP and VAE are unfortunate misnomers. In the early 1960s, when modern mechanical ventilation was in its infancy, the ventilator circuit (which often included nebulizers for humidification) was directly implicated in causing nosocomial pneumonia and was referred to as a respirator lung.64 For decades afterwards, the standard practice was to change ventilator circuits on at least a daily basis. Over the past 30 years, there has been extensive research into the role of the ventilator circuit as a source of VAP. In essence, the ventilator circuit plays a minor role in VAP, as: (1) it is the patient (and the ETT) who invariably colonizes the circuit, and (2) drastically reducing the frequency of circuit changes has had no impact on the frequency of VAP.65,66 Rather, clinician behavior in manipulating the circuit (eg, hand hygiene when breaking the circuit, care in handling resuscitator bags or circuit during disconnections) is the most likely source of patient inoculation.66

The predominant source of VAP is chronic microaspiration of oropharyngeal secretions pooled above the ETT cuff that occurs in as many as 88–100% of intubated patients.67,68 These secretions accumulate in the subglottic space and therefore cannot be effectively removed by suctioning the oral cavity. The volume capacity of this space is ∼10 mL, and the accumulation of large secretion volumes (100–150 mL/d) has been reported.69 ETT cuffs are typically made of polyvinyl chloride, which has limited distensibility and therefore requires the cuff to be of a diameter that, when appropriately inflated, is 50% greater than the trachea (which is ∼20 mm).70,71 As a result, the excess cuff volume forms longitudinal folds (microchannels) into which, depending upon secretion viscosity, infected oropharyngeal or gastric secretions chronically seep and inoculate the lungs, even under conditions of clinically excessive cuff-inflation pressures (50 cm H2O).32,68,72

The human trachea is a dynamic, distensible organ of varying size, shape, and tone altered by drugs, posture, head position, and the mere act of ventilation.73 It is essentially impossible, despite obtaining a good cuff seal, to fully prevent microaspiration. Moreover, unavoidable ETT movement that occurs during routine care (and particularly during intra-hospital transport) enhances microaspiration.72,74,75 This is supported by evidence suggesting that unavoidable movement of the ETT related to routine care such as ETT repositioning is an independent risk factor for VAP (odds ratio of 3.11, 95% CI 1.03–9.42, P = .04).76

Attaining a cuff seal that prevents gross aspiration around the ETT requires intra-cuff pressures of 20–30 cm H2O. When cuff pressure falls to 15 cm H2O, rapid fluid leakage into the lungs may occur.74 Microaspiration also happens during loss of PEEP during circuit disconnections and when negative intrathoracic pressures develop during routine suctioning.74,77,78 In addition, ETT cuffs slowly lose their volume from the effects of continuous positive intrathoracic pressure and the imperfect, mass-produced, one-way valves separating the pilot balloon from atmospheric pressure. ETT cuffs require replenishing, often several times a day, to maintain an adequate seal, thus signifying that some degree of microaspiration is essentially unavoidable.

ETTs are made of polyvinylchloride plastics, to which most bacteria readily adhere, and become partially or completely coated.79 Within days of endotracheal intubation, the internal lumen of the tube is coated with biological material (eg, mucoproteins, fibrin, blood cells) that pathogenic bacteria and molds adhere to and that provides an excellent medium for growth, as well as the potential for enhanced virulence from comingling with other pathogens.80,81 Moreover, in mechanically ventilated patients receiving antibiotic therapy for pulmonary infections, bacteria growing within the biofilm are protected from antibiotics. In consequence, there is the potential for repeated re-inoculation of the lower respiratory tract as bacterial aggregates break off with routine suctioning or from sheer forces during inspiratory gas flow.80

Small observational studies suggest that biofilm formation on ETTs may be a significant risk factor for VAP. In one study, 80% of subjects with VAP were found to have advanced (stage IV) biofilm within the ETT lumen.82 In another study, the presence of contaminated biofilm in subjects intubated for at least 8 d resulted in a 7-fold increase in VAP risk.81 In a small prospective study on subjects intubated for an average of 6 d, daily use of the Mucus Shaver device to clean the internal lumen of the ETT markedly reduced bacterial colonization compared with controls (8% vs 83% colonization, P < .001).83 Although not significant, the VAP rate was also lower (8% vs 25%).

Modifiable Risk Factors for Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia

Endotracheal Tube Design and Monitoring

Specialized ETTs allow suctioning of the subglottic space above the cuff, and a recent meta-analysis reported a 50% reduction in VAP risk using subglottic drainage tubes.32 Some newer tube designs have also incorporated an ultrathin (7 μm) polyurethane cuff that greatly reduces fluid leakage in vitro.67 Combining subglottic drainage tubes with the polyurethane cuff design decreased VAP by 64%.72 A recent meta-analysis of 13 randomized clinical trials estimated a risk reduction of 45% and delayed onset of VAP by an average of 2.7 d in those managed with subglottic drainage tubes.84

Laboratory studies have consistently demonstrated that polyurethane-cuffed ETTs (and similarly designed silicone cuffs) are superior to standard polyvinyl cuffs in minimizing fluid leakage.70,71,75,85–87 Significantly reduced microaspiration has been reproduced in clinical trials,75,78 coinciding with significant reductions in VAP (26–45% relative decrease).88–90 However, others have not been able to demonstrate the superiority of polyurethane-cuffed ETTs in reducing microaspiration.91 Use of specialized ETTs may be of particular benefit in trauma and acute brain injury patients. These patients often require frequent intra-hospital transportation, which, in itself, is independently associated with a 3–5-fold increased risk for VAP.92,93 Thus, despite the best designed ETTs to date, VAP can be reduced substantially, but not eliminated.

Under-inflation (< 20 cm H2O) of ETT cuff pressure is an independent risk factor for VAP.94 Continuous monitoring and control of tracheal cuff pressures have been shown to maintain adequate ETT cuff pressure and reduce the incidence of both microaspiration and VAP.95,96 In these studies, automatic control of ETT cuff pressure maintained between 20 and 30 cm H2O in 98–100% of observations reduced the incidence of VAP by 51–62%. Among controls, the percentage of subjects with incidences of ETT cuff pressure of < 20 cm H2O ranged from 9 to 55%. Although maintaining adequate ETT cuff pressure is important in reducing microaspiration, it cannot eliminate the risk, as other unavoidable factors such endotracheal suctioning and patient movement contribute to the problem.95

Noninvasive Ventilation

By obviating the need for endotracheal intubation, noninvasive ventilation (NIV) should diminish the incidence of VAP. Numerous studies of NIV have reported the incidence of VAP, usually as a secondary outcome. A meta-analysis of these studies found that NIV substantially decreased the risk of VAP compared with invasive mechanical ventilation (odds ratio of 0.15, 95% CI 0.04–0.58, P = .006).97 An extensive 3-y surveillance study involving ∼790,000 critically ill subjects compared VAP rates of those managed with invasive mechanical ventilation or NIV and those not requiring mechanical support.98 Of the 6,869 cases of nosocomial pneumonia, 85% occurred in those requiring invasive mechanical ventilation compared with 2% associated with NIV and 13% in those not requiring mechanical assistance. Unfortunately, NIV is appropriate in a circumscribed patient population with acute respiratory failure (eg, COPD exacerbation, cardiogenic pulmonary edema), which limits its utilization as a strategy for reducing VAP.

Weaning and Sedation Strategies

As discussed above, VAP is directly related to the duration of mechanical ventilation. Late-onset VAP accounts for both the majority of cases and the greatest associated morbidity and mortality,61 with the highest risk occurring between days 6 and 8 of mechanical ventilation.61–63 In the early 1990s, the average duration of mechanical ventilation was 7–12 d, with an additional average of 3–5 d for weaning using various techniques driven by protocols.99 In a contemporaneous survey of clinicians, the average duration of weaning ranged from 5 to 18 d, with the longest duration associated with synchronized intermittent mandatory ventilation combined with pressure support ventilation.100 However, more contemporary studies have reported that the average duration of mechanical ventilation now is ∼5–7 d.45,46,101–103 This invites speculation that the incidence of VAP likely was much greater before modern weaning and sedation practices.

Daily sedation interruptions or spontaneous breathing trials are core aspects of the VAP bundle and have been demonstrated to significantly reduce the average duration of mechanical ventilation by 1.5–3 d.99,101,103,104 If one assumes a 2-d incubation period from inoculation to VAP onset, then lowering the average duration of mechanical ventilation from 6 or 7 to ∼4 d might further reduce the incidence of VAP, yet the direct impact of daily sedation interruption and spontaneous breathing trial strategies on the incidence of VAP has not been rigorously studied. Observational studies from both medical and surgical ICUs have reported that spontaneous breathing trials and targeted/daily sedation interruptions (irrespective of other VAP prevention measures) reduced the prevalence of VAP from ∼15 to 5%. This corresponded with a decrease in the mean duration of mechanical ventilation to fewer than 5 d.105,106 In another study, targeted sedation reduced the average duration of mechanical ventilation from 10.3 to 4.4 d with a corresponding trend toward reduced VAP from 20.4 to 8.3% (P = .10).107

Semirecumbent Positioning

Perhaps no other aspect of the VAP bundle is as emblematic of the evidence-based limitations of VAP prevention as patient positioning. Supine mechanically ventilated subjects with nasogastric tubes had a substantially higher incidence of aspirating orogastric secretions and microbial colonization compared with subjects managed in the semirecumbent position with head-of-bed elevated to 45°.108 Nonetheless, there continued to be a substantial incidence (32%) of lower airway colonization when subjects were positioned at 45°. Others have reported no difference in the incidence of gastroesophageal reflux (54%) into the oropharynx in mechanically ventilated subjects with nasogastric tubes who are placed in a supine versus semirecumbent position with head-of-bed elevated to 30–45°.109

Drakulovic et al110 reported a significantly higher incidence of confirmed VAP (23% vs 5%, P = .02) when comparing supine to semirecumbent position at 45°. Moreover, there was significant interaction between enteral feeding and supine positioning and the incidence of VAP. The authors emphasized the importance of nasogastric tubes in facilitating gastroesophageal reflux by compromising lower esophageal sphincter function. Although smaller nasogastric tubes are thought to interfere less, it appears that nasogastric tubes with inner diameters of 3–6 mm neither prevented nor reduced gastroesophageal reflux or microaspiration in mechanically ventilated subjects in the semirecumbent position.111

Unfortunately, the feasibility of maintaining critically ill subjects semirecumbent at a head-of-bed elevation of 45° was been found to be unachievable in a multi-center randomized trial despite extraordinary oversight by researchers.112 Subjects in the intervention arm could be maintained only at 24–32° elevation, and compared with the control arm (supine with head-of-bed elevated to 10–15°), the incidence of confirmed VAP was not different (10.7% vs 6.5%). Interestingly, there was no difference in the actual head-of-bed elevation within each treatment arm that could distinguish those who developed VAP from those who did not.

A previous systematic review113 and meta-analysis114 of 3 clinical trials of subject positioning and VAP came to opposite conclusions. The former found the evidence inconclusive whether semirecumbent positioning at 45° head-of-bed elevation is either effective or harmful, whereas the latter stressed that positioning subjects at 15–30° head-of-bed elevation was ineffective, but positioning at 45° reduced clinically diagnosed VAP. The conclusions of the meta-analysis were strongly criticized, however, based upon the degree of heterogeneity between studies.115 The authors of the meta-analysis conceded their own concern regarding the heterogeneity and the limited number of studies from which to draw conclusions.116

Non-Modifiable Risk Factors for Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia

Impact of Poverty and Homelessness

Public hospitals in particular treat a significant number of patients who live in poverty, many of whom are homeless. Lack of oral health leading to periodontitis and decayed teeth is prominent among this population, with a 11.6–17.5-fold greater risk for oral disease.117–119 This population is commonly colonized with pulmonary pathogens and has higher incidences of both community-acquired and health care-associated pneumonia.120 In a study of the homeless in Los Angeles, 58% had severe, untreated dental caries.118 Sixty-five percent of ICU subjects had dental plaque/oral mucosa colonized with pulmonary pathogens, with an ∼10-fold increased risk for pneumonia during the first 6 d of ICU stay.120

Oral chlorhexidine or topical antibiotic (selective decontamination) therapy has been reported to reduce the incidence of nosocomial pneumonia by an average of 40%, with the highest reduction (69%) reported in postoperative cardiac surgery subjects.121,122 However, a recent meta-analysis of oral chlorhexidine treatment suggests that it does not reduce the incidence of VAP in the general ICU population.123 Irrespective of these findings, the extent to which oral care with chlorhexidine would be effective in patients with advanced periodontal/dental disease is unknown.

Vulnerable populations are more likely to suffer from chronic malnutrition, which also is a significant risk factor for VAP. Admission serum albumin below 2.2 g/dL is associated with a 6-fold higher incidence of VAP.124 Cumulative energy deficits among mechanically ventilated medical ICU subjects have been associated with increasing risk of VAP from 3- to 16-fold as energy deficits rise from 30 to 67%.125

Traumatic Injuries

Because of the complexity of caring for patients with traumatic injury, the VAP bundle is not always practical, and adherence fluctuates over time.9 VAP bundle adherence was less frequently achieved in those with more severe injuries (Injury Severity Scores of > 25).9 Furthermore, VAP prevention measures are unlikely to be effective in some patients, particularly the subset of surgical/trauma patients with extensive abdominal pathology, as many have abdominal compartment syndrome. These patients have an inordinate number of risk factors for VAP: (1) they typically require frequent transportation outside the ICU; (2) they often can be placed only in a supine position; (3) they frequently require an oro- or nasogastric tube; (4) they have decreased bowel motility and subsequent colonization with pathogenic organisms; and (5) they are susceptible to gastric reflux, which is further enhanced by elevated intra-abdominal pressure.126,127 Even when patients requiring an oro- or nasogastric tube can be positioned optimally, gastroesophageal reflex cannot be prevented in mechanically ventilated patients.127 Therefore, the risk for microaspiration of contaminated gastric secretions cannot be fully prevented despite meticulous oral care. Moreover, even the radical therapy of selective digestive decontamination, whereby the entire aerodigestive tract is decontaminated by combined topical and parental prophylactic antibiotic therapy, generally reduces the risk of developing VAP by ∼50%.126

Brain injury and other forms of trauma are recognized to cause immunosuppression and therefore increase the risk of VAP.128,129 When traumatic brain injury occurs in the context of other traumatic injuries, the prevalence and incidence of VAP are higher (30% vs 23%, 28.2 vs 22.5 cases/1,000 ventilator days).130 Immunosuppression in general increases the risk of VAP by a factor of 2.5.131 In addition, factors common in neurosurgical/trauma patients, such as blood transfusions,132 blunt chest trauma,40 aggressive fluid resuscitation,133 and loss of consciousness leading to aspiration, are all risk factors for VAP.

Furthermore, ARDS carries a substantial risk for developing VAP.134,135 Although some risk is related to the prolonged duration of mechanical ventilation, damage to the lung architecture from severe inflammation as well as macrophage dysfunction may increase the vulnerability of these patients to VAP.1 The incidence of VAP in patients with ARDS has ranged from 15 to 60% (average of 38%), yet evidence suggests that lung-protective ventilation may be decreasing the incidence (29%).136 Similar to other studies, the daily hazard for VAP in ARDS is most pronounced between days 6 and 10.136 Moreover, recent evidence suggests an inter-related genetic predisposition in some critically ill patients toward developing both VAP and ARDS.137

Do Zero Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia Rates With Bundled Care Possess Evidence-Based Credibility?

100% compliance does not guarantee 100% prevention—Croce et al9

That a zero VAP rate has been reported with adherence to the VAP bundle provides prima face justification for regulatory bodies and insurance companies to declare VAP a preventable and non-reimbursable event. Some of the most frequently cited studies supporting the achievement of zero VAP are based upon surveillance data from one private hospital in São Paulo, Brazil.138,139 However, even these studies were able to reach a zero VAP rate for only a few months when ventilator bundle adherence was > 95%.139 In contrast, the first prospective multi-center study (in a predominantly medical ICU setting) linking bundled preventive care with VAP reduction demonstrated that 95% adherence produced a 59% decrease in VAP, whereas ICUs reporting at least a 20% improvement in VAP bundle adherence had a 45% decrease in VAP.140 In other words, a nearly 5-fold increase in bundle adherence was required to yield a 14% absolute (31% relative) improvement in VAP reduction.

Further misconceptions regarding the plausibility of a zero VAP rate may have been introduced by the Michigan Keystone collaborative report, wherein the reduction in median cases of VAP from 6 to 0 was emphasized.141 In contrast, the corresponding mean VAP incidence decreased by 49% from 6.9 to 3.4 cases/1,000 ventilator days. Interestingly, the ∼75% bundle adherence achieved happened in the context of ICUs being encouraged to conduct quality-improvement evaluations at one reference time point, twice per week during morning rounds. This introduced the likelihood of bias toward higher bundle adherence than would be expected with unplanned, random assessments over a 24-h period.

In contrast, a European study of VAP bundle care chose to record the lowest daily adherence and found a 25% relative reduction in VAP (15.5 to 11.7%, 12.9 to 9.3 cases/1,000 ventilator days) despite an overall nadir adherence of < 30%.142 These investigators found that not all bundle measures had equal impact on VAP reduction. For example, adherence to hand hygiene reduced the risk of developing VAP by 65%, compared with monitoring ETT cuff pressure (79%) and oral hygiene (77%). Moreover, this study challenged the conventional all-or-nothing assumption on the effectiveness of the VAP bundle.

The legitimacy of inter-facility comparisons of VAP rates necessarily assumes that case mixes with varying risk factors can be controlled for during analysis. In reality, this requires laborious patient-based data collection and is of questionable feasibility. Stated differently, can VAP rates reasonably be reduced in hospitals serving high-risk patient populations if these institutions could perform preventive measures at a very high rate? A recent European study using surveillance data from over 78,000 subjects in 525 ICUs attempted to answer this question.143 The projected VAP rates were based upon the top-tenth percentile-ranked ICUs reflecting the lowest infection rates. When adjustments were made for case mixes, hospitals with the highest infection rates were projected to prevent ∼52% of their VAP cases, which is similar to other published estimates,144 as well as recently published data from the California Partnership for Health.145

Summary

The most common of all follies is to believe passionately in the palpably not true. It is the chief occupation of mankind.—HL Mencken

Taken together, the evidence presented in this review suggests that significant reductions in VAP are possible and that the goal of reducing VAP by 50% or greater is realistic. However, exaggerated claims of eradicating VAP are harmful both to clinical science and public policy discourse alike. For example, the Institute for Healthcare Improvement 5 Million Lives Campaign stated that 25 participating facilities self-reported having “gone over a year without a ventilator-associated pneumonia…demonstrating that this sort of complication is avoidable and is not inevitable.”17 However, these facilities represented < 1% of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement's participating institutions and whose patient population was not described. The popular promotion of zero VAP deviates from the principles of evidenced-based practice. Some have opined that because human lives are at stake, there is an understandable tendency for critical interpretation of data to be “eclipsed by the immediate need to do something.”49 This is a generous but ultimately facile explanation, particularly given the pervasive and enthusiastic embracing of zero VAP within a wide swath of the health-care community.

There are striking similarities between the fervent belief that VAP can be eradicated and the phenomenon social scientists refer to as mass conversion disorder.146,147 More commonly known as collective delusion, it has a storied history in human culture.148,149 In essence, when a social group perceives an external threat, it may in turn misperceive common phenomena as suddenly threatening, resulting in false attributions and irrational decisions. Irrationality is defined as “coming to conclusions that cannot be justified by current knowledge.”150 Social delusions can be exacerbated by the reinforcing behaviors of external entities, such as companies marketing products to prevent VAP, as well as self-promoting public advocacy groups. In this regard, it cannot escape notice that the Institute for Healthcare Improvement's 5 Million Lives Campaign functioned as a fundraising tool.17

Health care in the United States has been under economic pressure for decades, which has only intensified with the looming prospect of an aging baby-boomer generation. The current efforts to reduce patient harm and costs are refreshing, laudable, and necessary. Unfortunately, this becomes problematic when the desire to improve patient care either distorts or ignores the principles of evidence-based practice and unwittingly threatens the reputation and economic viability of hospitals. It is a welcomed sign that, in the face of mounting opposition, regulatory agencies have temporarily backed away from imposing draconian measures regarding VAP. However, members of the health-care professions themselves unintentionally contributed to this problem through a lack of appropriate skepticism. This should give pause for collective self-reflection.

Footnotes

  • Correspondence: Richard H Kallet MSc RRT FAARC, Department of Anesthesia, UCSF at SFGH, NH:GA-2, 1001 Potrero Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94110. E-mail: rich.kallet{at}ucsf.edu.
  • Mr Kallet has disclosed no conflicts of interest.

  • Copyright © 2015 by Daedalus Enterprises

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Respiratory Care: 60 (10)
Respiratory Care
Vol. 60, Issue 10
1 Oct 2015
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The Vexing Problem of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia: Observations on Pathophysiology, Public Policy, and Clinical Science
Richard H Kallet
Respiratory Care Oct 2015, 60 (10) 1495-1508; DOI: 10.4187/respcare.03774

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The Vexing Problem of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia: Observations on Pathophysiology, Public Policy, and Clinical Science
Richard H Kallet
Respiratory Care Oct 2015, 60 (10) 1495-1508; DOI: 10.4187/respcare.03774
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  • Article
    • Abstract
    • Introduction
    • Inherent Limitations in Diagnosing Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia
    • Socioeconomic Context of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia Reporting
    • Ventilator-Associated Events as a Potential Solution
    • Initial Studies on Ventilator-Associated Event Surveillance
    • Pathophysiology of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia: Microaspiration and Endotracheal Tube Design
    • Modifiable Risk Factors for Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia
    • Non-Modifiable Risk Factors for Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia
    • Do Zero Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia Rates With Bundled Care Possess Evidence-Based Credibility?
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Keywords

  • artificial airway
  • endotracheal tube
  • microaspiration
  • ventilator-associated pneumonia
  • ventilator-associated events

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