Conference Coverage

Standard incubation can miss P. acnes in infective endocarditis


 

AT ECCMID 2016

References

Because they presented with severe disease, almost all of the patients (22) underwent surgery as their intimal treatment. At the time of surgery, everyone was taking an antibiotic that covered P. acnes. Single-agent therapy was the definitive treatment for most, with vancomycin being most commonly employed (59%), followed by ceftriaxone (25%). A few patients had a combination of both drugs or a combination of vancomycin and rifampin. One patient took penicillin.

The single patient who was medically treated received 6 weeks of intravenous ceftriaxone. After 1 month, he was readmitted with blood cultures positive for P. acnes. He underwent surgery and a valve sequencing confirmed P. acnes as the infective agent.

There were two in-hospital deaths, but the rest of the patients were discharged on antibiotic therapy and recovered with no additional deaths or relapses.

The extended time P. acnes required to show in culture was enough for the Cleveland Clinic to reconsider incubation guidelines for the microorganism, Dr. Banzon said.

“There are enough cases taking 9 or 10 days that we now always hold these cultures for at least 10 days when we’re looking for P. acnes.”

She had no financial disclosures.

msullivan@frontlinemedcom.com

Pages

Recommended Reading

CABG with ITA for moderate stenosis improved long-term survival
MDedge Surgery
Robotic PCI succeeds in patients with acute MI
MDedge Surgery
Periop statins don’t prevent acute kidney injury after cardiac surgery
MDedge Surgery
Endovascular surges over surgery for patients hospitalized for CLI
MDedge Surgery
VIDEO: STICHES trial update boosts CABG in ischemic cardiomyopathy
MDedge Surgery
VIDEO: STICHES trial update boosts CABG in ischemic cardiomyopathy
MDedge Surgery
Similarities seen in rate and rhythm control for postsurgical AF
MDedge Surgery
FIRE AND ICE trial called a win for cryoablation of AF
MDedge Surgery
FDA approves first leadless pacemaker
MDedge Surgery
Drug-eluting stent recipients can safely have surgery sooner
MDedge Surgery