| Literature DB >> 35884210 |
Camelia Melania Budea1,2, Marius Pricop3, Felix Bratosin2, Iulia Bogdan2, Miriam Saenger2, Ovidiu Ciorica4, Laurentiu Braescu2,5, Eugenia Maria Domuta2,6, Mirela Loredana Grigoras2,7, Cosmin Citu8, Mircea Mihai Diaconu8, Iosif Marincu2.
Abstract
Infective endocarditis (IE) is increasingly prevalent in the elderly, particularly due to the rising frequency of invasive procedures and intracardiac devices placed on these individuals. Several investigations have highlighted the unique clinical and echocardiographic characteristics, the microorganisms implicated, and the prognosis of IE in the elderly. In addition, the old population seems to be fairly diverse, ranging from healthy individuals with no medical history to patients with many ailments and those who are immobile. Furthermore, the therapy of IE in this group has not been well investigated, and worldwide recommendations do not propose tailoring the treatment approach to the patient's functional state and comorbid conditions. A multicenter research study was designed as a retrospective study of hospitalized patients with infective endocarditis, aiming to examine the characteristics of elderly patients over 65 years old with infective endocarditis in relation to the antibiotic and antifungal treatments administered, as well as to quantify the incidence of treatment resistance, adverse effects, and mortality in comparison to patients younger than 65. Based on a convenience sampling method, we included in the analysis a total of 78 patients younger than 65 and 131 patients older than 65 years. A total of 140 patients had endocarditis on native valves and 69 patients had endocarditis on prosthetic valves. A significantly higher proportion of elderly patients had signs of heart failure on admission, and the mortality rate was significantly higher in the elderly population. A majority of infections had a vascular cause, followed by dental, maxillo-facial, and ENT interventions. The most common complications of IE were systemic sepsis (48.1% of patients older than 65 years vs. 30.8% in the younger group). The most frequent bacterium involved was Staphylococcus aureus, followed by Streptococcus spp. in a total of more than 50% of all patients. The most commonly used antibiotics were cephalosporins in 33.5% of cases, followed by penicillin in 31.2% and glycopeptides in 28.7%, while Fluconazole was the initial option of treatment for fungal endocarditis in 24.9% of cases. Heart failure at admission (OR = 4.07), the development of septic shock (OR = 6.19), treatment nephrotoxicity (OR = 3.14), severe treatment complications (OR = 4.65), and antibiotic resistance (OR = 3.24) were significant independent risk factors for mortality in the elderly patients. Even though therapeutic management was initiated sooner in the older patients, the associated complications and mortality rate remained significantly greater than those in the patients under 65 years old.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotics; antifungals; bacterial infections; endocarditis; fungal infections
Year: 2022 PMID: 35884210 PMCID: PMC9312084 DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics11070956
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6382
Background characteristics of the study participants.
| Variables * | <65 Years ( | >65 Years ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 59.6 ± 7.2 | 67.5 ± 11.8 | <0.001 |
|
| 0.651 | ||
| Men | 43 (55.1%) | 68 (51.9%) | |
| Women | 35 (44.9%) | 63 (48.1%) | |
|
| |||
| Underweight (<18.5 kg/m2) | 5 (6.4%) | 7 (5.3%) | 0.051 |
| Normal weight (18.5–25.0 kg/m2) | 40 (51.3%) | 46 (35.1%) | |
| Overweight (>25.0 kg/m2) | 33 (42.3%) | 59.5 (59.5%) | |
|
| |||
| Smoking | 28 (35.9%) | 40 (30.5%) | 0.423 |
| Chronic alcohol consumption | 3 (3.8%) | 6 (4.6%) | 0.800 |
|
| |||
| Cardiac | 33 (42.3%) | 61 (46.6%) | 0.549 |
| Metabolic | 13 (16.7%) | 29 (22.1%) | 0.339 |
| Cerebrovascular | 21 (26.9%) | 48 (36.6%) | 0.148 |
| Digestive & liver | 14 (17.9%) | 34 (26.0%) | 0.183 |
| Kidney disease | 6 (7.7%) | 14 (10.7%) | 0.476 |
| Cancer | 7 (9.0%) | 18 (13.7%) | 0.304 |
* Data are reported as n (%) and were calculated using the Chi-square test and Fisher’s exact test unless specified differently. BMI—Body Mass Index.
Endocarditis features of the patients included in the study.
| Variables * | <65 Years ( | >65 Years ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Days from symptom onset until treatment (median, IQR) | 3 (2) | 2 (2) | 0.622 |
| Presence of vegetations | 61 (78.2%) | 109 (83.2%) | 0.369 |
| Presence of cardiac abscess | 14 (17.9%) | 28 (21.4%) | 0.550 |
|
| 59 (75.6%) | 81 (61.8%) | 0.040 |
| Aortic | 11 (18.6%) | 33 (40.7%) | 0.005 |
| Aortic and tricuspid | 16 (27.1%) | 12 (14.8%) | 0.072 |
| Mitral | 20 (33.9%) | 24 (29.6%) | 0.591 |
| Mitral and aortic | 12 (20.3%) | 12 (14.8%) | 0.391 |
|
| 19 (24.4%) | 50 (38.2%) | 0.040 |
| Aortic biologic valve | 3 (15.8%) | 6 (12.0%) | 0.676 |
| Aortic mechanical valve | 3 (15.8%) | 7 (14.0%) | 0.850 |
| Mitral biologic valve | 4 (21.1%) | 12 (24.0%) | 0.795 |
| Mitral mechanical valve | 5 (26.3%) | 15 (30.0%) | 0.763 |
| Mitral and aortic biologic valve | 2 (10.5%) | 6 (12.0%) | 0.864 |
| Mitral and aortic mechanical valve | 2 (10.5%) | 4 (8.0%) | 0.739 |
|
| |||
| Peripheral/central vein catheter | 27 (34.6%) | 51 (38.9%) | 0.532 |
| Hemodialysis | 6 (7.7%) | 11 8.4%) | 0.856 |
| Cardiac surgery | 3 (3.8%) | 7 (5.3%) | 0.623 |
| Angiography | 5 (6.4%) | 9 (6.9%) | 0.897 |
| Vascular surgery | 8 (10.3%) | 4 (3.1%) | 0.030 |
| Gastrointestinal | 7 (9.0%) | 12 (9.2%) | 0.963 |
| Maxillo-facial interventions | 9 (11.5%) | 16 (12.2%) | 0.884 |
| Ear-nose-throat interventions | 13 (16.7%) | 21 (16.0%) | 0.904 |
* Data are reported as n (%) and were calculated using the Chi-square test and Fisher’s exact test unless specified differently; IQR—Interquartile Range.
Procedures, complications, and outcomes.
| Variables * | <65 Years ( | >65 Years ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 33 (42.3%) | 75 (57.3%) | 0.036 |
|
| 0.044 | ||
| Aortic valve replacement | 6 (18.2%) | 20 (26.7%) | |
| Mitral valve replacement | 11 (33.3%) | 13 (17.3%) | |
| Double valve replacement | 4 (12.1%) | 24 (32.0%) | |
| Mitral valve repair | 12 (36.4%) | 18 (24.0%) | |
|
| |||
|
| 0.005 | ||
| Yes | 25 (32.1%) | 68 (51.9%) | |
| No | 53 (67.9%) | 63 (48.1%) | |
|
| 0.010 | ||
| Mild | 49 (62.8%) | 54 (41.2%) | |
| Moderate | 22 (28.2%) | 59 (45.0%) | |
| Severe | 7 (9.0%) | 18 (13.7%) | |
|
| |||
| Yes | 38 (48.7%) | 86 (65.6%) | 0.015 |
| No | 40 (51.3%) | 45 (34.4%) | |
| Cardiogenic shock | 7 (9.0%) | 19 (14.5%) | 0.241 |
| Valvular leak | 7 (9.0%) | 25 (19.1%) | 0.049 |
| Stroke | 8 (10.3%) | 19 (14.5%) | 0.375 |
| Atrioventricular block | 18 (23.1%) | 49 (37.4%) | 0.031 |
| Kidney failure | 14 (17.9%) | 47 (35.9%) | 0.005 |
| Mediastinitis | 8 (10.3%) | 27 (20.6%) | 0.052 |
| Systemic sepsis | 24 (30.8%) | 63 (48.1%) | 0.014 |
|
| |||
| ICU admission | 30 (38.5%) | 79 (60.3%) | 0.002 |
| Days in the ICU (mean ± SD) | 5.9 ± 2.2 | 7.7 ± 4.0 | <0.001 t |
| Days between symptom onset and death (mean ± SD) | 8.2 ± 6.6 | 4.7 ± 6.0 | <0.001 t |
| Days between symptom onset and ICU admission (mean ± SD) | 5.8 ± 4.1 | 3.0 ± 5.3 | <0.001 t |
| Mortality | 21 (26.9%) | 53 (40.5%) | 0.047 |
| Days until discharge (mean ± SD) | 13.8 ± 4.3 | 19.4 ± 7.1 | <0.001 t |
* Data are reported as n (%) and were calculated using the Chi-square test and Fisher’s exact unless specified differently. t—Unpaired Student’s t-test; SD—Standard Deviation; ICU—Intensive Care Unit.
Microbial identification and antibacterial and antifungal management.
| Variables * | <65 Years ( | >65 Years ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 0.579 | ||
| Culture | 46 (59.0%) | 77 (58.8%) | |
| PCR | 47 (28.2%) | 31 (23.7%) | |
| Culture and PCR | 72 (12.8%) | 23 (17.6%) | |
|
| |||
| Positive samples | 48 (61.5%) | 77 (58.8%) | |
| False negative result | 30 (38.5%) | 54 (41.2%) | |
|
| 0.542 | ||
| Bacterial | 69 (88.5%) | 112 (85.5%) | |
| Fungal | 9 (11.5%) | 19 (14.5%) | |
|
| 0.319 | ||
|
| 22 (28.2%) | 38 (29.0%) | |
| CoNs | 7 (9.0%) | 19 (14.5%) | |
| 20 (25.6%) | 20 (15.3%) | ||
|
| 3 (3.8%) | 9 (6.9%) | |
|
| 12 (15.4%) | 17 (13.0%) | |
| Other gram-negative bacilli | 5 (6.4%) | 9 (6.9%) | |
| 6 (7.7%) | 13 (9.9%) | ||
| 3 (3.8%) | 6 (4.6%) | ||
|
| 6 (7.7%) | 23 (17.6%) | 0.046 |
|
| 0.417 | ||
| Monotherapy | 45 (57.7%) | 68 (51.9%) | |
| Combined | 33 (42.3%) | 63 (48.1%) | |
|
| 0.758 | ||
| Yes | 24 (30.8%) | 43 (32.8%) | |
| No | 54 (69.2%) | 88 (67.2%) | |
|
| 0.566 | ||
| Monoinfection | 73 (93.6%) | 125 (95.4%) | |
| Two pathogens | 5 (6.4%) | 6 (4.6%) |
* Data are reported as n (%) and were calculated using the Chi-square test and Fisher’s exact unless specified differently. CoNs—Coagulase-negative staphylococci.
Figure 1Distribution of antibiotics used for patients with endocarditis. Data are represented as a pie chart of the nine antibiotic classes used in the affected patients in descending order of frequency of use.
Figure 2Distribution of antifungals used among patients with endocarditis. Data are represented as a pie chart of the five antifungals used in the affected patients in descending order of frequency of use.
Antibacterial and antifungal treatment side effects.
| Variables * | <65 Years ( | >65 Years ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Acute immune reactions | 5 (6.4%) | 6 (4.6%) | 0.566 |
| Delayed reactions | 4 (5.1%) | 4 (3.1%) | 0.449 |
| Nephrotoxicity | 4 (5.1%) | 18 (13.7%) | 0.049 |
| Neurotoxicity | 2 (2.6%) | 9 (6.9%) | 0.177 |
| Liver injury | 3 (3.8%) | 16 (12.2%) | 0.041 |
| Enterocolitis | 11 (14.1%) | 38 (29.0%) | 0.013 |
| Falls and delirium | 1 (1.3%) | 16 (12.2%) | 0.005 |
|
| |||
| Acute immune reactions | 1 (1.3%) | 3 (2.3%) | 0.606 |
| Delayed reactions | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (1.5%) | 0.272 |
| Nephrotoxicity | 2 (2.6%) | 11 (8.4%) | 0.091 |
| Neurotoxicity | 1 (1.3%) | 4 (3.1%) | 0.417 |
| Liver injury | 2 (2.6%) | 9 (6.9%) | 0.532 |
| Enterocolitis | 14 (5.1%) | 10 (7.6%) | 0.483 |
| Falls and delirium | 0 (0.0%) | 7 (20.6%) | 0.037 |
* Data are reported as n (%) and were calculated using the Chi-square test and Fisher’s exact unless specified differently.
Identification of significant risk factors for mortality in the patients with endocarditis.
| Factors * | <65 Years or (95% CI) | >65 Years or (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heart failure at admission | 3.15 (2.87–5.21) | <0.001 | 4.07 (3.44–6.90) | <0.001 |
| Septic shock | 3.08 (2.66–6.09) | <0.001 | 6.19 (4.15–8.28) | <0.001 |
| Treatment nephrotoxicity | 1.66 (1.07–2.34) | 0.001 | 3.14 (2.36–4.03) | 0.001 |
| Severe treatment complications | 3.39 (2.25–5.11) | <0.001 | 4.65 (3.82–6.21) | <0.001 |
| Antibiotic resistance | 2.61 (1.71–4.06) | <0.001 | 3.24 (2.09–5.52) | <0.001 |
*—Adjusted by age, COVID-19 severity, and pulmonary diseases.