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Scenario Recommendation
Outpatient: Previously healthy and no use of antimicrobials within the previous 3 months A macrolide
Doxycyline
Outpatient: Presence of comorbidities such as chronic heart, lung, liver or renal disease; diabetes mellitus; alcoholism; malignancies; asplenia; immunosuppressing conditions or use of immunosuppressing drugsA fluoroquinolone (moxifloxacin, gemifloxacin, or levofloxacin [750 mg])
A b-lactam plus a macrolide
Outpatient: Use of antimicrobials within the last 3 months An alternative from a different class should be selected:

A fluoroquinolone (moxifloxacin, gemifloxacin, or levofloxacin [750 mg])

A b-lactam plus a macrolide
Outpatient: In regions with a high rate (125%) of infection with high-level (MIC 16 mg/mL) macrolide-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniaeA fluoroquinolone (moxifloxacin, gemifloxacin, or levofloxacin [750 mg])
A b-lactam plus a macrolide
Inpatient general medical ward A respiratory fluoroquinolone
A b-lactam plus a macrolide
Inpatient ICU A b-lactam (cefotaxime, ceftriaxone, or ampicillin-sulbactam) plus azithromycin
A b-lactam (cefotaxime, ceftriaxone, or ampicillin-sulbactam) plus a fluoroquinolone
For penicillin-allergic patients: a respiratory fluoroquinolone and aztreonam
Outpatient: Concern about pseudomonasAn antipneumococcal, antipseudomonal b-lactam (piperacillintazobactam, cefepime, imipenem, or meropenem) plus either ciprofloxacin or levofloxacin (750 mg)


B-lactam plus an aminoglycoside and azithromycin
B-lactam plus an aminoglycoside and an antipneumococcal fluoroquinolone

For penicillin-allergic patients, substitute aztreonam for above b-lactam
Concern about community acquired MRSA Add vancomycin or linezolid