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Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1998

Outcome of Staphylococcus aureus Bacteremia According to Compliance with Recommendations of Infectious Diseases Specialists: Experience with 244 Patients

Vance G. Fowler; Linda L. Sanders; Daniel J. Sexton; Likuo Kong; Kieren A. Marr; Ajay K. Gopal; Geoffrey S. Gottlieb; R. Scott McClelland; G. Ralph Corey

To determine whether recommendations of infectious diseases specialists affect outcome for patients, we evaluated 244 hospitalized patients with Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia. We offered our management recommendations to each patients physicians and then assessed the clinical outcome for both patients for whom our consultative advice was followed and those for whom our advice was not heeded. All patients were followed up for 12 weeks after their first positive blood culture. Our management advice was followed for 112 patients (45.9%) and partially or completely ignored for 132 patients (54.1%). Patients for whom our recommendations were followed were more likely to be cured of their S. aureus infection and less likely to relapse (P < .01), despite having significantly more metastatic infections (P < .01) at the outset of therapy, than were those for whom our recommendations were not followed. Failure to follow recommendations to remove an infected intravascular device was the most important risk for treatment failure. After controlling for other factors, logistic regression analysis revealed that patients whose intravascular device was not removed were 6.5 times more likely to relapse or die of their infection than were those whose device was removed. Our findings suggest that patient-specific management advice by infectious diseases consultants can improve the clinical outcome for patients with S. aureus bacteremia.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1997

Role of echocardiography in evaluation of patients with Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia: experience in 103 patients.

Vance G. Fowler; Jennifer S. Li; G. Ralph Corey; Jerry J. Boley; Kieren A. Marr; Ajay K. Gopal; Li Kuo Kong; Geoffrey S. Gottlieb; Carolyn L Donovan; Daniel J. Sexton; Thomas J. Ryan

OBJECTIVESnThe purpose of this prospective study was to examine the role of echocardiography in patients with Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia (SAB).nnnBACKGROUNDnThe reported incidence of infective endocarditis (IE) among patients with SAB varies widely. Distinguishing patients with uncomplicated bacteremia from those with IE is therapeutically and prognostically important, but often difficult.nnnMETHODSnOne hundred-three consecutive patients undergoing both transthoracic (TTE) echocardiography and transesophageal (TEE) echocardiography were prospectively evaluated. All patients presented with fever and > or = 1 positive blood culture and were followed up for 12 weeks.nnnRESULTSnAlthough predisposing heart disease was present in 42 patients (41%), clinical evidence of infective endocarditis (IE) was rare (7%). TTE revealed anatomic abnormalities in 33 patients, but vegetations in only 7 (7%), and was considered indeterminate in 19 (18%). TEE identified vegetations in 22 patients (aortic valve in 5, mitral valve in 9, tricuspid valve in 4, catheter in 2 and pacemaker in 2, abscesses in 2, valve perforation in 1 and new severe regurgitation in 1; 26 total [25%]). Using Duke criteria for the diagnosis of IE, definite IE was present in 26 patients (25%). Clinical findings and predisposing heart disease did not distinguish between patients with and without IE. The sensitivity of TTE for detecting IE was 32%, and the specificity was 100%. The addition of TEE increased the sensitivity to 100%, but resulted in one false positive result (specificity 99%). TEE detected evidence of IE in 19% of patients with a negative TTE and 21% of patients with an indeterminate TTE. At follow-up, cure of staphylococcal infection occurred in a similar percentage of patients with and without IE (77% and 75%, respectively). However, death due to sepsis was significantly more likely among patients with IE (4 of 26 [15%]) than among those without IE (2 of 77 [3%]) (p = 0.03).nnnCONCLUSIONSnOur results suggest that IE is common among patients admitted to the hospital with SAB and is associated with an increased risk of death due to sepsis. TEE is essential to establish the diagnosis and to detect associated complications. Therefore, the test should be considered part of the early evaluation of patients with SAB.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1999

Infective Endocarditis Due to Staphylococcus aureus: 59 Prospectively Identified Cases with Follow-up

Vance G. Fowler; Linda L. Sanders; Li Kuo Kong; R. Scott McClelland; Geoffrey S. Gottlieb; Jennifer S. Li; Thomas J. Ryan; Daniel J. Sexton; Georges Roussakis; Lizzie J. Harrell; G. Ralph Corey

Fifty-nine consecutive patients with definite Staphylococcus aureus infective endocarditis (IE) by the Duke criteria were prospectively identified at our hospital over a 3-year period. Twenty-seven (45.8%) of the 59 patients had hospital-acquired S. aureus bacteremia. The presumed source of infection was an intravascular device in 50.8% of patients. Transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) revealed evidence of IE in 20 patients (33.9%), whereas transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) revealed evidence of IE in 48 patients (81.4%). The outcome for patients was strongly associated with echocardiographic findings: 13 (68.4%) of 19 patients with vegetations visualized by TTE had an embolic event or died of their infection vs. five (16.7%) of 30 patients whose vegetations were visualized only by TEE (P < .01). Most patients with S. aureus IE developed their infection as a consequence of a nosocomial or intravascular device-related infection. TEE established the diagnosis of S. aureus IE in many instances when TTE was nondiagnostic. Visualization of vegetations by TTE may provide prognostic information for patients with S. aureus IE.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1999

Recurrent Staphylococcus auveus Bacteremia: Pulsed-Field Gel Electrophoresis Findings in 29 Patients

Vance G. Fowler; Li Kuo Kong; G. Ralph Corey; Geoffrey S. Gottlieb; R. Scott McClelland; Daniel J. Sexton; Diane Gesty-Palmer; Lizzie J. Harrell

To identify risk factors for relapse among 309 prospectively identified cases of Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia, patients with recurrent S. aureus bacteremia were identified, and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) was performed on isolates from both episodes. PFGE banding patterns from both isolates were identical in 23 patients, consistent with relapsed infection. Patients with PFGE-confirmed relapse were more likely by both univariate and multivariate analyses to have an indwelling foreign body (odds ratio [OR]=18.2, 95% confidence interval [CI]=7. 6-43.6; P<.001), to have received vancomycin therapy (OR=4.1, 95% CI=1.5-11.6; P=.008), or be hemodialysis-dependent (OR=4.1, 95% CI=1. 8-9.3; P=.002) than patients who did not develop recurrent bacteremia. These results suggest that recurrent episodes of S. aureus bacteremia are primarily relapses and are associated with an indwelling foreign body, receiving vancomycin therapy, and hemodialysis dependence.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2000

Prospective Analysis of Staphylococcus aureus Bacteremia in Nonneutropenic Adults With Malignancy

Ajay K. Gopal; Vance G. Fowler; Manish A. Shah; Diane Gesty-Palmer; Kieren A. Marr; R. Scott McClelland; Li Kuo Kong; Geoffrey S. Gottlieb; Lanclos K; Jennifer S. Li; Daniel J. Sexton; G. Ralph Corey

PURPOSEnTo determine the primary sources and secondary complications of Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia (SAB) in cancer patients, as well as predictors of outcome in cancer patients with SAB.nnnPATIENTS AND METHODSnFifty-two patients at Duke University Medical Center met entry criteria between September 1994 and December 1996 for this prospective cohort study involving hospitalized nonneutropenic adult cancer patients with SAB. All subjects were observed throughout initial hospitalization and were evaluated again at 6 and 12 weeks or until death.nnnRESULTSnSAB was intravascular device-related in 42%, tissue infection-related (TIR) in 44%, and unidentifiable focus-related (UFR) in 13%. Seventeen patients (33%) were found to have metastatic infections or conditions, with eight (15%) developing infectious endocarditis (IE). Patients with TIR bacteremia were less likely than other patients to develop IE (4% v 24%, P =.06). The overall mortality rate was 38%, the SAB-related mortality rate was 15%, and the rate of SAB relapse was 12%. Methicillin resistance was not associated with adverse outcome. Inability to identify a point of entry (UFR bacteremia), however, was associated with a higher overall mortality rate (100% v 24%, P =.0006). Furthermore, a 72-hour surveillance blood culture positive for organisms was associated with an increased incidence of IE (P =.0006), metastatic infections or conditions (P =.0002), SAB relapse (P =.038), and SAB-related death (P =.038).nnnCONCLUSIONnSAB in cancer patients is associated with significant morbidity from frequent metastatic infections or conditions including IE, as well as considerable mortality. Unknown initial infection site and 72-hour surveillance cultures positive for organisms were predictive of a complicated course and poor final outcome.


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2000

Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia in the surgical patient: a prospective analysis of 73 postoperative patients who developed Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia at a tertiary care facility

Geoffrey S. Gottlieb; Vance G. Fowler; Li Kuo Kong; Raymond S McClelland; Ajay K. Gopal; Kieren A. Marr; Jennifer S. Li; Daniel J. Sexton; Donald D. Glower; G. R. Corey

BACKGROUNDnStaphylococcus aureus is a frequent cause of infection and bacteremia in the postoperative patient. Unfortunately, there have been no prospective studies evaluating these patients, so the incidence of complications, subsequent treatment algorithms, and prognosis remain undefined. The objectives of this prospective study of postoperative Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia (SAB) were to define the primary sources of bacteremia and to identify the common complications of SAB in the postoperative setting.nnnMETHODSnA registry was developed into which 309 consecutive adult patients with SAB were prospectively enrolled between September 1994 and December 1996. Seventy-three of these patients (23.6%) developed SAB in the postoperative setting.nnnRESULTSnAnalysis of the clinical features of these 73 postoperative patients revealed three important results. First, infective endocarditis is surprisingly common in postoperative patients with SAB and the classical stigmata of endocarditis are often absent. Transesophageal echocardiography was performed in 31 of 73 patients; 10 of these patients (32.3%) met Duke Criteria for definite endocarditis, but only 3 of these patients had vegetations detected by transthoracic echocardiography, and only 2 patients had peripheral stigmata of infective endocarditis. Second, the development of SAB after cardiothoracic surgery was strongly associated with underlying S. aureus mediastinitis. Twenty-one of the 23 patients who developed SAB after median sternotomy had mediastinitis (positive predictive value 91.3%). In many cases, the diagnosis of mediastinitis was not apparent when SAB was detected. Third, complications, relapses, and mortality were high in postoperative patients with SAB. Fourteen of 73 patients (19.2%) developed multiple noncardiac metastatic complications, including metastatic abscesses (5), septic emboli (3), pneumonia or empyema (2), septic arthritis (1), epidural abscess (1), and other metastatic foci (7). Twelve of 73 patients (16.4%) had recurrent staphylococcal infection after treatment of their first episode of SAB, including 8 patients (11.0%) with recurrent bacteremia. Of patients who survived, those with recurrent staphylococcal infection were more likely to have an infected surgical wound than were patients who were cured of infection (p = 0.05). Finally, mortality attributable to SAB (11.0%), and all-cause mortality (21.9%), was high.nnnCONCLUSIONSnSAB in the postoperative setting is often a severe disease with high morbidity and mortality. A thorough diagnostic evaluation is indicated in surgical patients with S. aureus bacteremia to ensure the early detection of metastatic infections such as infective endocarditis and to define foci such as mediastinitis re quiring surgical intervention.


JAMA Internal Medicine | 1999

Staphylococcus aureus Bacteremia Among Elderly vs Younger Adult Patients: Comparison of Clinical Features and Mortality

R. Scott McClelland; Vance G. Fowler; Linda L. Sanders; Geoffrey S. Gottlieb; Li Kuo Kong; Daniel J. Sexton; Kenneth E. Schmader; Lanclos K; G. Ralph Corey


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1999

Infective endocarditis due to Staphylococcus aureus

Vance G. Fowler; Linda L. Sanders; Li Kuo Kong; R. Scott McClelland; Geoffrey S. Gottlieb; Jennifer S. Li; Thomas J. Ryan; Daniel J. Sexton; Georges Roussakis; Lizzie J. Harrell; G. Ralph Corey


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1997

Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia

Vance G. Fowler; Ajay K. Gopal; Kieren A. Marr; Likuo Kong; Geoffrey S. Gottlieb; Daniel J. Sexton; Thomas J. Ryan; G. R. Corey


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 1997

Outcome of Staphylococcus aureus Bacteremia according to compliance with infectious diseases specialist recommendations

Vance G. Fowler; Daniel J. Sexton; Likuo Kong; Ajay K. Gopal; Geoffrey S. Gottlieb; R. Scott McClelland; G. Ralph Corey

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Kieren A. Marr

Johns Hopkins University

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