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2410. Clinical outcomes and antimicrobial management strategies of Pseudomonas endocarditis

BACKGROUND: Infective endocarditis secondary to Pseudomonas is rare. Our objective was to investigate outcomes of patients with Pseudomonas endocarditis by treatment strategy and identify factors associated with treatment failure. METHODS: Adult patients with definitive Pseudomonas endocarditis at 8...

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Autores principales: Shah, Sunish, Clarke, Lloyd, Shields, Ryan K
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10677481/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.2030
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author Shah, Sunish
Clarke, Lloyd
Shields, Ryan K
author_facet Shah, Sunish
Clarke, Lloyd
Shields, Ryan K
author_sort Shah, Sunish
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Infective endocarditis secondary to Pseudomonas is rare. Our objective was to investigate outcomes of patients with Pseudomonas endocarditis by treatment strategy and identify factors associated with treatment failure. METHODS: Adult patients with definitive Pseudomonas endocarditis at 8 hospitals were identified between July 2010 and December 2022. Unless the cultured valve yielded a Gram-negative pathogen, patients with blood cultures growing Gram-positive bacteria or yeast for >24 hours were excluded. Combination therapy was defined as receipt of ≥2 in vitro active agents for ≥72 hours. Failure was a defined as death or microbiologic failure by day 42; microbiologic failures included escalation of antimicrobial therapy following treatment-emergent resistance, increased vegetation size, or blood cultures positive for ≥14 days. RESULTS: 34 patients met the inclusion criteria. 32% (11/34) were people who inject drugs and 12% (4/34) were organ transplant recipients. P. aeruginosa was the underlying pathogen in 97% (33/34) of patients. 65% (22/34) and 35% (12/34) received combination and monotherapy, respectively. Patients managed with combination therapy had comparable rates of prosthetic valve endocarditis (41% vs 17%, P=0.25), a vegetation size > 1cm (59% vs 42%, P=0.33) and no receipt of cardiac surgical intervention despite an indication (32% vs 17%, P=0.44) compared to those who received monotherapy. There was no significant difference in 42-day failure rates (32% vs 17%, P=0.44), 90-day mortality (18% vs 25%, P=0.68) or median hospital length of stay (22 days vs. 23, P=0.914) between patients who receivedcombination therapy and monotherapy. Patients who experienced 42-day failure were more likely to have multi-drug resistant (MDR) Pseudomonas on initial blood cultures (44% vs 4%, P=0.012) and were less likely to be initially managed with piperacillin/tazobactam or cefepime (44% vs 96%, P=0.004) compared to those who experienced clinical cure. Combination therapy versus monotherapy [Figure: see text] Factors associated with clinical failure [Figure: see text] CONCLUSION: To our knowledge, this is the largest study of Pseudomonas endocarditis to date. We did Not identify a benefit to combination therapy; however, the overall sample size was small. Endocarditis due to MDR P. aeruginosa was associated with a higher risk of clinical failure. DISCLOSURES: Ryan K. Shields, PharmD, MS, Allergan: Advisor/Consultant|Cidara: Advisor/Consultant|Entasis: Advisor/Consultant|GSK: Advisor/Consultant|Melinta: Advisor/Consultant|Melinta: Grant/Research Support|Menarini: Advisor/Consultant|Merck: Advisor/Consultant|Merck: Grant/Research Support|Pfizer: Advisor/Consultant|Roche: Grant/Research Support|Shionogi: Advisor/Consultant|Shionogi: Grant/Research Support|Utility: Advisor/Consultant|Venatorx: Advisor/Consultant|Venatorx: Grant/Research Support
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spelling pubmed-106774812023-11-27 2410. Clinical outcomes and antimicrobial management strategies of Pseudomonas endocarditis Shah, Sunish Clarke, Lloyd Shields, Ryan K Open Forum Infect Dis Abstract BACKGROUND: Infective endocarditis secondary to Pseudomonas is rare. Our objective was to investigate outcomes of patients with Pseudomonas endocarditis by treatment strategy and identify factors associated with treatment failure. METHODS: Adult patients with definitive Pseudomonas endocarditis at 8 hospitals were identified between July 2010 and December 2022. Unless the cultured valve yielded a Gram-negative pathogen, patients with blood cultures growing Gram-positive bacteria or yeast for >24 hours were excluded. Combination therapy was defined as receipt of ≥2 in vitro active agents for ≥72 hours. Failure was a defined as death or microbiologic failure by day 42; microbiologic failures included escalation of antimicrobial therapy following treatment-emergent resistance, increased vegetation size, or blood cultures positive for ≥14 days. RESULTS: 34 patients met the inclusion criteria. 32% (11/34) were people who inject drugs and 12% (4/34) were organ transplant recipients. P. aeruginosa was the underlying pathogen in 97% (33/34) of patients. 65% (22/34) and 35% (12/34) received combination and monotherapy, respectively. Patients managed with combination therapy had comparable rates of prosthetic valve endocarditis (41% vs 17%, P=0.25), a vegetation size > 1cm (59% vs 42%, P=0.33) and no receipt of cardiac surgical intervention despite an indication (32% vs 17%, P=0.44) compared to those who received monotherapy. There was no significant difference in 42-day failure rates (32% vs 17%, P=0.44), 90-day mortality (18% vs 25%, P=0.68) or median hospital length of stay (22 days vs. 23, P=0.914) between patients who receivedcombination therapy and monotherapy. Patients who experienced 42-day failure were more likely to have multi-drug resistant (MDR) Pseudomonas on initial blood cultures (44% vs 4%, P=0.012) and were less likely to be initially managed with piperacillin/tazobactam or cefepime (44% vs 96%, P=0.004) compared to those who experienced clinical cure. Combination therapy versus monotherapy [Figure: see text] Factors associated with clinical failure [Figure: see text] CONCLUSION: To our knowledge, this is the largest study of Pseudomonas endocarditis to date. We did Not identify a benefit to combination therapy; however, the overall sample size was small. Endocarditis due to MDR P. aeruginosa was associated with a higher risk of clinical failure. DISCLOSURES: Ryan K. Shields, PharmD, MS, Allergan: Advisor/Consultant|Cidara: Advisor/Consultant|Entasis: Advisor/Consultant|GSK: Advisor/Consultant|Melinta: Advisor/Consultant|Melinta: Grant/Research Support|Menarini: Advisor/Consultant|Merck: Advisor/Consultant|Merck: Grant/Research Support|Pfizer: Advisor/Consultant|Roche: Grant/Research Support|Shionogi: Advisor/Consultant|Shionogi: Grant/Research Support|Utility: Advisor/Consultant|Venatorx: Advisor/Consultant|Venatorx: Grant/Research Support Oxford University Press 2023-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10677481/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.2030 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstract
Shah, Sunish
Clarke, Lloyd
Shields, Ryan K
2410. Clinical outcomes and antimicrobial management strategies of Pseudomonas endocarditis
title 2410. Clinical outcomes and antimicrobial management strategies of Pseudomonas endocarditis
title_full 2410. Clinical outcomes and antimicrobial management strategies of Pseudomonas endocarditis
title_fullStr 2410. Clinical outcomes and antimicrobial management strategies of Pseudomonas endocarditis
title_full_unstemmed 2410. Clinical outcomes and antimicrobial management strategies of Pseudomonas endocarditis
title_short 2410. Clinical outcomes and antimicrobial management strategies of Pseudomonas endocarditis
title_sort 2410. clinical outcomes and antimicrobial management strategies of pseudomonas endocarditis
topic Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10677481/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.2030
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