Current Epidemiology and Outcome of Infective Endocarditis: A Multicenter, Prospective, Cohort Study

Author

Muñoz, Patricia

Kestler, Martha

Alarcón, Aristides de

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

Bermejo, Javier

Rodríguez-Abella, Hugo

Fariñas, María Carmen

Cobo Belaustegui, Manuel

Mestres Lucio, Carlos-Alberto

Llinares, Pedro

Goenaga Sánchez, Miguel Ángel

Navas Pérez, Enrique

Oteo, José Antonio

Tarabini Paola

Bouza, Emilio

Moreno Camacho, Ma. Asunción

Sitges Carreño, Marta

Publication date

2020-03-05T17:27:08Z

2020-03-05T17:27:08Z

2015-10

2020-03-05T17:27:09Z

Abstract

Abstract: The aim of the study was to describe the epidemiologic and clinical characteristics and identify the risk factors of short-term and 1-year mortality in a recent cohort of patients with infective endocarditis (IE). From January 2008, multidisciplinary teams have prospectively collected all consecutive cases of IE, diagnosed according to the Duke criteria, in 25 Spanish hospitals. Overall, 1804 patients were diagnosed. The median age was 69 years (interquartile range, 55-77), 68.0% were men, and 37.1% of the cases were nosocomial or health care-related IE. Gram-positive microorganisms accounted for 79.3% of the episodes, followed by Gram-negative (5.2%), fungi (2.4%), anaerobes (0.9%), polymicrobial infections (1.9%), and unknown etiology (9.1%). Heart surgery was performed in 44.2%, and in-hospital mortality was 28.8%. Risk factors for in-hospital mortality were age, previous heart surgery, cerebrovascular disease, atrial fibrillation, Staphylococcus or Candida etiology, intracardiac complications, heart failure, and septic shock. The 1-year independent risk factors for mortality were age (odds ratio [OR], 1.02), neoplasia (OR, 2.46), renal insufficiency (OR, 1.59), and heart failure (OR, 4.42). Surgery was an independent protective factor for 1-year mortality (OR, 0.44). IE remains a severe disease with a high rate of in-hospital (28.9%) and 1-year mortality (11.2%). Surgery was the only intervention that significantly reduced 1-year mortality.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Endocarditis; Epidemiologia; Malalties infeccioses; Endocarditis; Epidemiology; Communicable diseases

Publisher

Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins. Wolters Kluwer Health

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000001816

Medicine, 2015, vol. 94, num. 43, p. e1816

https://doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000001816

Rights

cc-by (c) Muñoz, Patricia et al., 2015

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