Faculty, Staff and Student Publications
Publication Date
3-1-2023
Journal
Annals of the American Thoracic Society
Abstract
Pneumonia imposes a significant clinical burden on people with immunocompromising conditions. Millions of individuals live with compromised immunity because of cytotoxic cancer treatments, biological therapies, organ transplants, inherited and acquired immunodeficiencies, and other immune disorders. Despite broad awareness among clinicians that these patients are at increased risk for developing infectious pneumonia, immunocompromised people are often excluded from pneumonia clinical guidelines and treatment trials. The absence of a widely accepted definition for immunocompromised host pneumonia is a significant knowledge gap that hampers consistent clinical care and research for infectious pneumonia in these vulnerable populations. To address this gap, the American Thoracic Society convened a workshop whose participants had expertise in pulmonary disease, infectious diseases, immunology, genetics, and laboratory medicine, with the goal of defining the entity of immunocompromised host pneumonia and its diagnostic criteria.
Keywords
Humans, Pneumonia, Immunocompromised Host, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, Organ Transplantation, Societies
Included in
Allergy and Immunology Commons, Bioinformatics Commons, Biomedical Informatics Commons, Medical Sciences Commons, Oncology Commons, Pulmonology Commons, Respiratory Tract Diseases Commons
Comments
PMID: 36856712