HACEK infective endocarditis: characteristics and outcomes from a large, multi-national cohort

Author

Chambers, Stephen T.

Murdoch, David

Morris, Arthur

Holland, David

Pappas, Paul

Almela, M. (Manel)

Fernández Hidalgo, Nuria

Almirante, Benito

Bouza, Emilio

Forno, Davide

Rio, Ana del

Hannan, Margaret M.

Harkness, Jonh

Kanafani, Zeinha A.

Lalani, Tahaniyat

Lang, Selwyn

Raymond, Nigel

Read, Kerry

Vinogradova, Tatiana

Woods, Christopher W

Wray, Dannah

Corey, G. Ralph

Chu, Vivian H.

Sitges Carreño, Marta

Miró Meda, José M. (José María), 1956-

Moreno Camacho, Ma. Asunción

Anguera Camós, Ignasi

International Collaboration on Endocarditis Prospective Cohort Study (ICE-PCS) Investigators

Publication date

2020-01-14T16:29:52Z

2020-01-14T16:29:52Z

2013-05-17

2020-01-14T16:29:53Z

Abstract

The HACEK organisms (Haemophilus species, Aggregatibacter species, Cardiobacterium hominis, Eikenella corrodens, and Kingella species) are rare causes of infective endocarditis (IE). The objective of this study is to describe the clinical characteristics and outcomes of patients with HACEK endocarditis (HE) in a large multi-national cohort. Patients hospitalized with definite or possible infective endocarditis by the International Collaboration on Endocarditis Prospective Cohort Study in 64 hospitals from 28 countries were included and characteristics of HE patients compared with IE due to other pathogens. Of 5591 patients enrolled, 77 (1.4%) had HE. HE was associated with a younger age (47 vs. 61 years; p<0.001), a higher prevalence of immunologic/vascular manifestations (32% vs. 20%; p<0.008) and stroke (25% vs. 17% p = 0.05) but a lower prevalence of congestive heart failure (15% vs. 30%; p = 0.004), death in-hospital (4% vs. 18%; p = 0.001) or after 1 year follow-up (6% vs. 20%; p = 0.01) than IE due to other pathogens (n = 5514). On multivariable analysis, stroke was associated with mitral valve vegetations (OR 3.60; CI 1.34-9.65; p<0.01) and younger age (OR 0.62; CI 0.49-0.90; p<0.01). The overall outcome of HE was excellent with the in-hospital mortality (4%) significantly better than for non-HE (18%; p<0.001). Prosthetic valve endocarditis was more common in HE (35%) than non-HE (24%). The outcome of prosthetic valve and native valve HE was excellent whether treated medically or with surgery. Current treatment is very successful for the management of both native valve prosthetic valve HE but further studies are needed to determine why HE has a predilection for younger people and to cause stroke. The small number of patients and observational design limit inferences on treatment strategies. Self selection of study sites limits epidemiological inferences.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Endocarditis; Control d'infeccions; Endocarditis; Infection control

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0063181

PLoS One, 2013, vol. 8, num. 5, p. e63181

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0063181

Rights

cc-by (c) Chambers, Stephen T. et al., 2013

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es