Leonardo Gilberto Haas Signori, Maurício Weyh Ferreira, Luiz Carlos Hack Radünz Vieira,
Karen Reetz Müller, Waldo Luís Leite Dias de Mattos
Objective: To evaluate the frequency of the use of sputum examination in the clinical management of community-acquired pneumonia
(CAP) in a general hospital and to determine whether its use has an impact on mortality. Methods: The medical records of CAP patients
treated as inpatients between May and November of 2004 at the Nossa Senhora da Conceição Hospital, located in Porto Alegre, Brazil,
were reviewed regarding the following aspects: age; gender; severity of pneumonia (Fine score); presence of sputum; sputum bacteriology;
treatment history; change in treatment; and mortality. Results: A total of 274 CAP patients (134 males and 140 females) were evaluated.
Using the Fine score to quantify severity, we classified 79 (28.8%) of those 274 patients as class II, 45 (16.4%) as class III, 97 (35.4%) as class
IV, and 53 (19.3%) as class V. Sputum examination was carried out in 92 patients (33.6%). A valid sample was obtained in 37 cases (13.5%),
and an etiological diagnosis was obtained in 26 (9.5%), resulting in a change of treatment in only 9 cases (3.3%). Overall mortality was
18.6%. Advanced age (above 65), CAP severity, and dry cough were associated with an increase in the mortality rate. Sputum examination
did not alter any clinical outcome or have any influence on mortality. Conclusion: Sputum examination was used in a minority of patients
and was not associated with any noticeable benefit in the clinical management of patients with CAP treated in a hospital setting.
Keywords: Pneumonia/etiology; Sputum; Diagnosis.