Prosthetic valve endocarditis: who needs surgery? A multicentre study of 104 cases
Open Access
- 1 July 2005
- Vol. 91 (7) , 954-959
- https://doi.org/10.1136/hrt.2004.046177
Abstract
Objectives: To identify the prognostic markers of a bad outcome in a large population of 104 patients with prosthetic valve endocarditis (PVE), and to study the influence of medical versus surgical strategy on outcome in PVE and thus to identify patients for whom surgery may be beneficial. Design: Multicentre study. Methods and results: Among 104 patients, 22 (21%) died in hospital. Factors associated with in-hospital death were severe co-morbidity (6% of survivors v 41% of those who died, p = 0.05), renal failure (28% v 45%, p = 0.05), moderate to severe regurgitation (22% v 54%, p = 0.006), staphylococcal infection (16% v 54%, p = 0.001), severe heart failure (22% v 64%, p = 0.001), and occurrence of any complication (60% v 90%, p = 0.05). By multivariate analysis, severe heart failure (odds ratio 5.5) and Staphylococcus aureus infection (odds ratio 6.1) were the only independent predictors of in-hospital death. Among 82 in-hospital survivors, 21 (26%) died during a 32 month follow up. A Cox proportional hazards model identified early PVE, co-morbidity, severe heart failure, staphylococcus infection, and new prosthetic dehiscence as independent predictors of long term mortality. Mortality was not significantly different between surgical and non-surgical patients (17% v 25%, respectively, not significant). However, both in-hospital and long term mortality were reduced by a surgical approach in high risk subgroups of patients with staphylococcal PVE and complicated PVE. Conclusions: Firstly, PVE not only carries a high in-hospital mortality risk but also is associated with high long term mortality and needs close follow up after the initial episode. Secondly, congestive heart failure, early PVE, staphylococcal infection, and complicated PVE are associated with a bad outcome. Thirdly, subgroups of patients could be identified for whom surgery is associated with a better outcome: patients with staphylococcal and complicated PVE. Early surgery is strongly recommended for these patients.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prognostic Factors in 61 Cases of Staphylococcus aureus Prosthetic Valve Infective Endocarditis from the International Collaboration on Endocarditis Merged DatabaseClinical Infectious Diseases, 2004
- Guidelines on Prevention, Diagnosis and Treatment of Infective Endocarditis Executive Summary The Task Force on Infective Endocarditis of the European Society of CardiologyEuropean Heart Journal, 2004
- VALVE DISEASE: Prosthetic valve endocarditisHeart, 2001
- Early onset prosthetic valve endocarditis: the Cleveland Clinic Experience 1992–1997The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 2000
- Editorial Response: The Role of Valve Replacement in the Treatment of Prosthetic Valve EndocarditisClinical Infectious Diseases, 1998
- Clinical Outcome and Long-Term Prognosis of Late Prosthetic Valve Endocarditis: A 20-Year ExperienceClinical Infectious Diseases, 1997
- Infective endocarditis: Ten-year review of medical and surgical therapyThe Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 1996
- Reoperation on prosthetic heart valvesThe Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 1995
- Prosthetic valve endocarditis: Superiority of surgical valve replacement versus medical therapy onlyThe Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 1994
- New criteria for diagnosis of infective endocarditis: utilization of specific echocardiographic findingsPublished by Elsevier ,1994