Objective: To review the clinical presentation, radiology, microbiology, and response to therapy of patients with chronic bacterial pneumonia.
Design: A retrospective analysis.
Setting: An urban tertiary care medical center.
Participants: One hundred fifteen patients with pulmonary and/or constitutional symptoms of at least 1 month's duration with 4,000 or more colony-forming units (CFUs) of a single bacterial species identified by quantitative culture obtained via fiberoptic bronchoscopy.
Measurements: Charts were analyzed for presence or absence of any predisposing illness, symptoms at presentation, roentgenographic abnormalities, microbiologic results, findings at fiberoptic bronchoscopy, and results of therapeutic intervention.
Results: Sixty-five percent of patients with chronic bacterial pneumonia had a predisposing disease, 35 percent were "normal." Cough, fatigue, dyspnea, and weight loss were predominant symptoms in both groups. Bronchogenic carcinoma was newly diagnosed in 16 patients (14 percent). Haemophilus influenzae or alpha-hemolytic streptococcus was isolated in 68 percent of patients. Risk of recurrence of infection was inversely associated with duration of therapy in both groups.
Conclusions: Chronic bacterial pneumonia is more common than previously recognized. It occurs in patients with and without a predisposing illness. Clinical presentation, roentgenographic appearance, and bacteriology are similar between the two groups. Cure requires prolonged antibiotic therapy.