Association of persistent positive blood cultures and infective endocarditis: a cohort study among patients with suspected infective endocarditis.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_E1FB82714E70
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Association of persistent positive blood cultures and infective endocarditis: a cohort study among patients with suspected infective endocarditis.
Journal
International journal of infectious diseases
Author(s)
Antunes A.T., Monney P., Tzimas G., Tozzi P., Kirsch M., Guery B., Papadimitriou-Olivgeris M.
ISSN
1878-3511 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1201-9712
Publication state
In Press
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: aheadofprint
Abstract
To ascertain whether infective endocarditis (IE) was associated with persistent bacteraemia/candidaemia among patients with suspected IE.
This study included bacteraemic/candidaemic adult patients with echocardiography and follow-up blood cultures. Persistent bacteraemia/candidaemia was defined as continued positive blood cultures with the same microorganism for 48h or more after antibiotic treatment initiation. Each case was classified for IE by the Endocarditis Team.
Among 1962 episodes of suspected IE, IE (605; 31%) was the most prevalent infection type. Persistent bacteraemia/candidaemia was observed in 426 (22%) episodes. Persistent bacteraemia was more common among episodes with Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia compared to episodes with positive blood cultures for other pathogens (32%, 298/933 versus 12%, 128/1029; P<0.001). Multivariable analysis demonstrated that cardiac predisposing factors (aOR 1.84, 95% CI 1.31-2.60), community or non-nosocomial healthcare-associated (2.85, 2.10-3.88), bacteraemia by high-risk bacteria, such as S. aureus, streptococci, enterococci or HACEK (1.84, 1.31-2.60), two or more positive sets of index blood cultures (6.99, 4.60-10.63), persistent bacteraemia/candidaemia for 48 hours from antimicrobial treatment initiation (1.43, 1.05-1.93), embolic events within 48h from antimicrobial treatment initiation (12.81, 9.43-17.41), and immunological phenomena (3.87, 1.09-1.78) were associated with infective endocarditis.
IE was associated with persistent bacteraemia/candidaemia, along with other commonly associated factors.
Keywords
bone and joint infection, follow-up blood cultures, infective endocarditis, persistent bacteraemia, sepsis
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
05/04/2024 9:52
Last modification date
06/04/2024 7:24
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