Spontaneous Bacterial Empyema (SBEM)
🔍 Definition:
SBEM is infection of a pre-existing hepatic hydrothorax (pleural effusion in cirrhotic patients) without pneumonia. It is analogous to Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis (SBP) in the pleural space.
Occurs in the absence of pneumonia, unlike parapneumonic effusion or true empyema.
📊 Epidemiology:
- Occurs in ~13–16% of patients with hepatic hydrothorax.
- Mortality: 20–38%, higher in ICU.
- Often underdiagnosed due to subtle signs and lack of suspicion.
🔬 Pathophysiology:
Step |
Explanation |
1. Portal hypertension |
Causes hepatic hydrothorax due to fluid movement through diaphragmatic defects. |
2. Immune dysfunction |
Cirrhosis leads to decreased opsonization, complement, and PMN function. |
3. Bacterial translocation |
Gut flora translocates → bloodstream → pleural space. |
4. Secondary infection |
The normally sterile hydrothorax fluid becomes infected. |
🧪 Causative Organisms:
- Gram-negative bacilli:
- E. coli (most common)
- Klebsiella pneumoniae
- Gram-positive cocci:
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Enterococcus
- Staphylococcus aureus
Anaerobes are rare unless secondary to GI perforation.
🧠 Clinical Features:
- Often asymptomatic or subtle signs
- Fever, chills
- Pleuritic chest pain
- Worsening dyspnea
- Altered sensorium, confusion (hepatic encephalopathy)
- No features of pneumonia on CXR
🧪 Diagnosis:
A. Imaging:
- Chest X-ray: Pleural effusion (usually on right side); no lung consolidation
- CT chest: Rules out pneumonia or empyema; often just shows hydrothorax
B. Thoracentesis – Diagnostic Criteria
- Positive pleural fluid culture with PMN ≥250 cells/mm³
- OR PMN >500 cells/mm³ even if culture is negative, and no pneumonia on imaging
pH, glucose, LDH often normal or only mildly deranged (fluid remains transudative)
Parameter |
SBEM |
PMN count |
≥250 (positive culture) or >500 (culture-negative) |
Protein |
Low (transudate) |
Glucose |
Normal to mildly reduced |
pH |
>7.2 |
Culture |
Often positive |
ADA |
Normal |
CXR/CT |
No parenchymal infiltrate |
❗ Differentiating SBEM from Empyema
Feature |
SBEM |
Empyema |
Underlying disease |
Cirrhosis with hepatic hydrothorax |
Pneumonia or infection of lung |
Pleural fluid |
Transudate |
Exudate |
Pleural fluid pH |
>7.2 |
<7.2 |
Glucose |
Normal to mildly low |
<40 mg/dL |
Protein |
Low |
High |
LDH |
Normal or slightly high |
High |
Chest imaging |
No pneumonia |
Pneumonic infiltrates seen |
Management:
A. Empirical Antibiotics:
Same as SBP treatment (3rd-gen cephalosporin ± albumin)
Drug |
Dose |
Cefotaxime |
2 g IV q8h (preferred) |
OR Ceftriaxone |
1–2 g IV q24h |
If hospital-acquired/MDR risk |
Piperacillin-tazobactam, Meropenem ± Vancomycin |
- Duration: 7–10 days
B. Albumin Infusion
(Same as SBP)
- Indications: Creatinine >1 or bilirubin >4
- Dose: 1.5 g/kg on day 1, then 1 g/kg on day 3
Prevents renal dysfunction and improves survival.
C. Chest Tube Drainage:
- NOT routinely recommended
- Indicated only if:
- Gross pus
- Loculated empyema
- Respiratory distress due to massive effusion
Risks of fluid loss, protein depletion, and secondary infection are high in cirrhotics with routine chest tubes.
D. Definitive Treatment:
- TIPS (Transjugular Intrahepatic Portosystemic Shunt) – for refractory hydrothorax/SBEM
- Liver transplantation – definitive cure
⚠️ Complications:
- Sepsis, multiorgan failure
- Recurrence of SBEM
- Worsening hepatic encephalopathy
- Hepatorenal syndrome (HRS)
- Death (up to 40% if not recognized early)