Shorr Score for MRSA Pneumonia

Shorr Score
Recent hospitalization (≤90 days)
Nursing home/long-term care resident
Prior MRSA infection/colonization
Prior IV antibiotics (≤30 days)
ICU admission at presentation
Cerebrovascular disease
Shorr Score:0
Identifies pneumonia patients at low risk for MRSA.

Why Use

Pneumonia etiology varies for patients admitted for the diagnosis. Previous HCAP definition does not differentiate between drug resistant pathogens such as MRSA and other gram negative bacteria, which have different risk factors and treatments. Can help reduce overtreatment of MRSA pneumonia.

When to Use

Patients >18 years old admitted for pneumonia.

Formula

Addition of the selected points: 0 points 1 point 2 points Age <30 years or >79 years No Yes — Nursing home, skilled nursing facility, or long term acute care exposure Within 90 days No Yes — Prior IV antibiotic therapy Within 30 days No Yes — Hospitalization for ≥2 days Within 90 days No — Yes ICU admission On or before index culture No — Yes Any cerebrovascular disease Prior to admission No Yes — Dementia No Yes — Female with diabetes mellitus No Yes —

Pearls / Pitfalls

The Shorr Score for MRSA Pneumonia was developed to assess risk of MRSA pneumonia in admitted patients for whom the reason for admission was pneumonia, in order to determine who might benefit from adding MRSA coverage. Developed specifically to risk-stratify MRSA pneumonia patients, compared to the original health care associated pneumonia (HCAP) definition. Also differentiates between MRSA and drug-resistant gram-negative pneumonia, which HCAP does not.

Management

Options for MRSA treatment include vancomycin, linezolid, and clindamycin.

Advice

Risk factors for MRSA (infection with MRSA in the past year, known colonization, necrotizing or cavitary pneumonia, high severity-of-illness scores e.g. PSI/PORT or APACHE II , preceding or concurrent influenza), should also be taken into account when deciding if MRSA treatment is warranted. Intended to guide the decision of MRSA treatment initiation. Confirmation studies and clinical judgment should be used to decide if continued MRSA treatment is needed.

More Information

Interpretation: Shorr Score Risk for MRSA 0-1 Low risk for MRSA. Consider routine antibiotic coverage. 2-5 Intermediate risk for MRSA. Use clinical judgment regarding antibiotic coverage. 6-10 High risk for MRSA. Consider extended antibiotic coverage.

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