Sonication of heart valves detects more bacteria in infective endocarditis

被引:0
作者
Anna Gomes
Marleen van Oosten
Kasper L. B. Bijker
Kathleen E. Boiten
Elisa N. Salomon
Sigrid Rosema
John W. A. Rossen
Ehsan Natour
Yvonne L. Douglas
Greetje A. Kampinga
Sander van Assen
Bhanu Sinha
机构
[1] University of Groningen,Department of Medical Microbiology and Infection Prevention
[2] University Medical Center Groningen,Department of Thoracic Surgery
[3] Maastricht University Medical Center,Department of Cardio
[4] University of Groningen,Thoracic Surgery
[5] University Medical Center Groningen,Department of Internal Medicine (Infectious Diseases)
[6] Treant Zorggroep,undefined
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Scientific Reports | / 8卷
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摘要
Optimal antimicrobial treatment of infective endocarditis requires identification and susceptibility patterns of pathogens. Sonication of explanted heart valves could increase the identification and culture of pathogens, as shown in prosthetic joint and pacemaker/ICD infections. We tested 26 explanted heart valves from 20 patients with active definite endocarditis for added diagnostic value of sonication to the standard microbiological workup in a prospective diagnostic proof of concept study. Two sonication protocols (broth enrichment vs. centrifugation) were compared in an additional 35 negative control valves for contamination rates. We selected sonication/centrifugation based on acceptable false positive rates (11.4%; 4/35). Sonication/enrichment yielded many false positive results in negative controls (28.6%; 10/35), mainly Propionibacterium acnes (next-generation sequencing excluded technical problems). Compared to direct culture only, adding sonication/centrifugation (including molecular testing) significantly increased the diagnostic yield from 6/26 to 17/26 valves (p = 0.003). Most importantly, culture positives almost doubled (from 6 to 10), providing unique quantitative information about antimicrobial susceptibility. Even if direct molecular testing was added to the standard workup, sonication/centrifugation provided additional diagnostic information in a significant number of valves (8/26; 31%; p = 0.013). We concluded that sonication/centrifugation added relevant diagnostic information in the workup of heart valves with infective endocarditis, with acceptable contamination rates.
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