Literature DB >> 18955638

Current features of infective endocarditis in elderly patients: results of the International Collaboration on Endocarditis Prospective Cohort Study.

Emanuele Durante-Mangoni1, Suzanne Bradley, Christine Selton-Suty, Marie-Françoise Tripodi, Bruno Barsic, Emilio Bouza, Christopher H Cabell, Auristela Isabel de Oliveira Ramos, Vance Fowler, Bruno Hoen, Pam Koneçny, Asuncion Moreno, David Murdoch, Paul Pappas, Daniel J Sexton, Denis Spelman, Pierre Tattevin, José M Miró, Jan T M van der Meer, Riccardo Utili.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Elderly patients are emerging as a population at high risk for infective endocarditis (IE). However, adequately sized prospective studies on the features of IE in elderly patients are lacking.
METHODS: In this multinational, prospective, observational cohort study within the International Collaboration on Endocarditis, 2759 consecutive patients were enrolled from June 15, 2000, to December 1, 2005; 1056 patients with IE 65 years or older were compared with 1703 patients younger than 65 years. Risk factors, predisposing conditions, origin, clinical features, course, and outcome of IE were comprehensively analyzed.
RESULTS: Elderly patients reported more frequently a hospitalization or an invasive procedure before IE onset. Diabetes mellitus and genitourinary and gastrointestinal cancer were the major predisposing conditions. Blood culture yield was higher among elderly patients with IE. The leading causative organism was Staphylococcus aureus, with a higher rate of methicillin resistance. Streptococcus bovis and enterococci were also significantly more prevalent. The clinical presentation of elderly patients with IE was remarkable for lower rates of embolism, immune-mediated phenomena, or septic complications. At both echocardiography and surgery, fewer vegetations and more abscesses were found, and the gain in the diagnostic yield of transesophageal echocardiography was significantly larger. Significantly fewer elderly patients underwent cardiac surgery (38.9% vs 53.5%; P < .001). Elderly patients with IE showed a higher rate of in-hospital death (24.9% vs 12.8%; P < .001), and age older than 65 years was an independent predictor of mortality.
CONCLUSIONS: In this large prospective study, increasing age emerges as a major determinant of the clinical characteristics of IE. Lower rates of surgical treatment and high mortality are the most prominent features of elderly patients with IE. Efforts should be made to prevent health care-associated acquisition and improve outcomes in this major subgroup of patients with IE.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18955638     DOI: 10.1001/archinte.168.19.2095

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Intern Med        ISSN: 0003-9926


  55 in total

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Review 4.  The Changing Epidemiology of Infective Endocarditis in the Twenty-First Century.

Authors:  J Ambrosioni; M Hernandez-Meneses; A Téllez; J Pericàs; C Falces; J M Tolosana; B Vidal; M Almela; E Quintana; J Llopis; A Moreno; José M Miro
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5.  Reidentification of Streptococcus bovis isolates causing bacteremia according to the new taxonomy criteria: still an issue?

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6.  Infectious endocarditis with jump rope-like vegetations.

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Authors:  Daniel D Correa de Sa; Imad M Tleyjeh; Nandan S Anavekar; Jason C Schultz; Justin M Thomas; Brian D Lahr; Alok Bachuwar; Michal Pazdernik; James M Steckelberg; Walter R Wilson; Larry M Baddour
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Review 9.  Infective Endocarditis in the Elderly: Diagnostic and Treatment Options.

Authors:  M P Ursi; E Durante Mangoni; R Rajani; J Hancock; J B Chambers; B Prendergast
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Journal:  Ann Saudi Med       Date:  2009 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 1.526

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