Literature DB >> 31990202

Predictive factors of death associated with infective endocarditis in adult patients with congenital heart disease.

Reaksmei Ly1,2, Fabrice Compain1,3, Bamba Gaye1,4, Florence Pontnau1,2, Melissa Bouchard5, Jean-Luc Mainardi1,6, Laurence Iserin1,2, David Lebeaux1,6, Magalie Ladouceur1,2,4.   

Abstract

AIMS: Infective endocarditis is a severe infection which can occur in adult patients with congenital heart disease. We aimed to determine outcomes and risk factors of death in adult congenital heart disease and to investigate differences with infective endocarditis in non-congenital heart disease. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Between March 2000 and June 2018, 671 consecutive episodes of infective endocarditis in adult patients were retrospectively recorded. Cases were classified according to the modified Duke classification. All adult congenital heart disease cases were managed by infectious disease specialists and adult congenital heart disease cardiologists. During this period, 142 infective endocarditis episodes (21%) occurred in adult congenital heart disease patients with simple (46.5%), moderate (21.1%), or complex (32.4%) congenital heart disease. In-hospital mortality was 12.7%. The strongest predictive factors of in-hospital death in multivariate analysis were complexity of congenital heart disease (odds ratio (OR) 8.02, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.53-42.07), age (OR 1.05, 95% CI 1.00-1.19) and white blood cell count 12 g/L or greater (OR 8.72, 95% CI 2.42-31.43). Patients with congenital heart disease were significantly younger (median age 36 vs. 67 years, P<0.001), had undergone more redo cardiac surgeries (35.7% vs. 11.3%, P<0.01) and presented with more right-sided infective endocarditis (39.4% vs. 7.9%, P<0.01) than patients without congenital heart disease. Congenital heart disease was associated with two-fold lower in-hospital mortality rates (OR 0.37, 95% CI 0.19-0.74), independently of age, gender, obesity, renal function and side of infective endocarditis.
CONCLUSION: Although mortality associated with infective endocarditis is lower in adult patients with congenital heart disease than patients without congenital heart disease, infective endocarditis mortality is particularly high in patients with complex congenital heart disease. Education and prevention about the risk of infective endocarditis is essential, especially in this group.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Congenital heart disease; infective endocarditis; prosthesis

Year:  2020        PMID: 31990202     DOI: 10.1177/2048872620901394

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Heart J Acute Cardiovasc Care        ISSN: 2048-8726


  3 in total

1.  Improval of outcome in patients with endocarditis.

Authors:  Henning Bundgaard; Kasper K Iversen
Journal:  Eur Heart J Acute Cardiovasc Care       Date:  2021-05-11

2.  U-Shaped Association Between Serum Uric Acid and Short-Term Mortality in Patients With Infective Endocarditis.

Authors:  Xuebiao Wei; Bingqi Fu; Xiaolan Chen; WeiTao Chen; Zhenqian Wang; Danqing Yu; Guozhi Jiang; Jiyan Chen
Journal:  Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)       Date:  2021-11-02       Impact factor: 5.555

3.  Contribution of a ZIP-family protein to manganese uptake and infective endocarditis virulence in Streptococcus sanguinis.

Authors:  Tanya Puccio; Karina S Kunka; Seon-Sook An; Todd Kitten
Journal:  Mol Microbiol       Date:  2021-12-18       Impact factor: 3.979

  3 in total

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