“A contemporary description of staphylococcus aureus prosthetic valve endocarditis. Differences according to the time elapsed from surgery”

Staphylococcus aureus prosthetic valve endocarditis (SAPVE) has a poor prognosis. There are no large series that accurately describe this entity. This is a retrospective observational study on a prospective cohort from 3 Spanish reference hospitals for cardiac surgery, including 78 definitive episodes of left SAPVE between 1996 and 2016. Fifty percent had a Charlson Index score>5; 53% were health care-related. Twenty percent did not present fever. Complications at diagnosis included: severe heart failure (HF, 29%), septic shock (SS, 17.9%), central nervous system abnormalities (19%), septic metastasis (4%). Hemorrhagic stroke was not higher in anticoagulated patients. Twenty-seven percent were methicilin-resistant SA (MRSA). Fifteen of 31 had positive valve culture; it was related to surgery within first 24 hours. At diagnosis, 69% had vegetation (>10 mm in 75%), 21.8% perianular extension, and 20% prosthetic dehiscence. Forty-eight percent had persistent bacteremia, related to nonsurgical treatment. Perianular extension progressed in 18%. Surgery was performed in 35 episodes (12 with stroke). Eleven uncomplicated episodes were managed with medical therapy, 8 survived. In-hospital mortality was 55%, higher in episodes with hemorrhagic stroke (77.8% vs 52.2%, odds ratio 3.2 [0.62–16.55]). Early SAPVE was nosocomial (92%), presented as severe HF (54%), patients were diagnosed and operated on early, 38% died. In intermediate SAPVE (9 weeks–1 year) diagnosis was delayed...
Source: Medicine - Category: Internal Medicine Tags: Research Article: Observational Study Source Type: research