# Is It Useful to Repeat Blood Cultures in Endocarditis Patients? A Critical Appraisal

**Authors:** Wouter Kok

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics14141578 · 2024-07-22

## TL;DR

This paper argues that repeating blood cultures in endocarditis patients is unnecessary after starting treatment, as they don't reliably predict outcomes.

## Contribution

The study challenges the traditional practice of prolonging antibiotic therapy based on blood culture results by showing that day 7 infection status is a better predictor.

## Key findings

- Persistent bacteremia in the first 3 days is common in Staphylococcus and Enterococcus endocarditis.
- In-hospital mortality is more strongly linked to day 7 persistent infection and septic shock than early bacteremia.
- Valve cultures become negative after 14–21 days of therapy, with no benefit in prolonging beyond 21 days.

## Abstract

Background: Previous guidelines for endocarditis have suggested repeating blood cultures until they become negative, with limited evidence. Methods: Literature reviews were conducted (1) on the incidence of persistent bacteremia and association with outcome and (2) on timing of valve culture negativization to examine the claim for prolongation of antibiotic therapy starting from negative blood cultures. Results: Persistent bacteremia and fever may be present in the first 3 days of endocarditis, despite treatment, and are more common in Staphylococcus (especially MRSA) and Enterococcus species. Persistent bacteremia (48–72 h), persistent infection (day 7), and new onset septic shock are related and predict in-hospital mortality. It is, however, persistent infection at day 7 and septic shock that primarily determine the infectious course of endocarditis, and not persistent bacteremia. Valve cultures at surgery become negative in most cases (>85–90%) after 14–21 days of antibiotic therapy, with no calculated benefit for prolonging therapy after 21 days. Conclusions: Persistent infection at 7 days after appropriate antibiotic therapy is a better key event for prognosis then positive or negative blood cultures at 48–72 h. Therapy prolongation from the day of negative blood cultures is not reasonable. There is no need to survey blood cultures in endocarditis patients after starting therapy.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** endocarditis (MONDO:0005025)
- **Species:** Staphylococcus (taxon 1279), Enterococcus (taxon 1350)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Endocarditis (MESH:D004696), bacteremia (MESH:D016470), infection (MESH:D007239), fever (MESH:D005334), septic shock (MESH:D012772)
- **Species:** Enterococcus (genus) [taxon 1350], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Staphylococcus (genus) [taxon 1279]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11276044