febrile

Episode #44 – Febrile Digest – Gotta CAP ‘Em All!

FEBRILE DIGEST BLANK

Summary

Michael Cosimini and Sara Dong chat about pediatric community acquired pneumonia and using games for learning about ID!

Credits

Host: Sara Dong

Guest: Michael Cosimini

Producing/Editing/Cover Art: Sara Dong

Our Guest

Michael Cosimini, MD

Michael Cosimini is an assistant professor of pediatrics at the Oregon Health and Science University with clinical interests in pediatric dermatology and infectious diseases. He is the designer of Empiric Game and an associate editor and contributor at Pediatrics Reviews and Perspectives (PedsRAP). His work focuses on educational scholarship in the areas of podcasting and serious games for medical education.

Consult Notes

Empiric Game + more!

You can find the games mentioned on the show at http://www.EmpiricGame.com (for print and play versions).  You can also purchase a printed card set at https://www.drivethrucards.com/browse/pub/13729/Empiric?term=empiric.

Follow on Twitter as well!  

Microbiology/Etiologies of pediatric community acquired pneumonia (CAP)

Distinguishing CAP from other LRTI in pediatrics is difficult! There is wide variability between hospitals in diagnosis of CAP vs other lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs) and poor interrater reliability of auscultation. 

How long do we need to treat children for CAP?

Let’s start with the available guidelines:

Evidence for shorter courses of antibiotics for pediatric CAP

There are several RCTs for <5 day antibiotic courses for outpatient pediatric CAP pneumonia in LMIC.  We didn’t go over these on the podcast, but I wanted to provide some references:

Below are some papers looking at shorter courses for uncomplicated CAP in high income countries (suggesting 3-5 d courses)

Does knowing that a child has a virus with CAP change our practice?

Michael and Sara mentioned this paper, which they both liked.  All children with influenza-like illness had a respiratory viral panel done, but providers received results only ½ the time.  It showed that rapid viral testing did not decrease antibiotic prescribing.

Rao S, Lamb MM, Moss A, et al. Effect of Rapid Respiratory Virus Testing on Antibiotic Prescribing Among Children Presenting to the Emergency Department With Acute Respiratory Illness: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Netw Open. 2021;4(6):e2111836. Published 2021 Jun 1. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.11836

Disclosures

Our guest Michael Cosimini receives a royalty on sales of Empiric Game.  Not related to this podcast or content we discussed, but Michael also receives payment for audio contributions and editorial work for PedsRap. 

Febrile podcast and host report no relevant financial disclosures

Citation

Cosimini, M., Dong, S. “#44: Febrile Digest – Gotta CAP ‘Em All”. Febrile: A Cultured Podcast. https://player.captivate.fm/episode/787411f0-f7e4-403a-944b-008bb5b66434

Transcript

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