Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia: Difference between revisions

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Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia
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{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Staphylococcus aureus'' bacteremia}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Staphylococcus aureus'' bacteremia}}
[[Category:Endovascular infections]]
[[Category:Endovascular infections]]
[[Category:Bacteremias]]

Revision as of 01:58, 29 August 2021

Background

Classification

  • Community-onset: positive blood culture obtained within 48 hours of presentation
  • Nosocomial: positive blood culture obtained after 48 hours of presentation

Etiology

  • IVDU
  • Poor dentition
  • Dental work

Clinical Manifestations

  • Often non-specific fevers and chills, diagnosed on blood cultures
  • May have back pain unrelated to spinal osteomyelitis
  • May present with focus of metastatic disease

Investigations

  • Repeat blood cultures every 24 to 48 hours until negative
  • Transthoracic echo (TTE) or transesophageal echo (TEE)

Management

  • Infectious diseases consultation
  • Must rule out endocarditis! TTE, followed by TEE if suspicion remains high (see PREDICT score)
    • Low risk for endocarditis (no TEE) if all of the following:
      • No intracardiac device
      • Sterile follow-up blood cultures within 4 days from the initial set
      • No hemodialysis
      • Nosocomial acquisition
      • Absence of secondary foci
      • No clinical signs of endocarditis
    • Uncomplicated if all of the following:
      • Endocarditis is excluded
      • No implanted prostheses
      • Blood cultures clear by 2-4 days
      • Defervesces within 72 hours
      • No evidence of metastases
      • +/- identified source has been removed
  • Two-week course acceptable if uncomplicated, otherwise 4-6 weeks
  • MSSA: cloxacillin 2g IV q4h for 2 weeks (cefazolin as an alternative)
  • MRSA: vancomycin 1g IV q12h for 2 weeks
    • Adjust based on serum trough before every fourth dose
    • Target trough 15-20

Prognosis

  • Mortality 20-50% at 30 days, 60% at 1 year
  • Mortality halved by ID consult
  • Prognosis worse with
    • Increased age
    • Female sex
    • Pneumonia or source unknown
    • Dementia
    • Increasing comorbidities
    • Shock at time of presentation
    • Institutionalized patient

Further Reading

References

  1. ^  Anthony D. Bai, Carson KL. Lo, Adam S. Komorowski, Mallika Suresh, Kevin Guo, Akhil Garg, Pranav Tandon, Julien Senecal, Olivier Del Corpo, Isabella Stefanova, Clare Fogarty, Guillaume Butler-Laporte, Emily G. McDonald, Matthew P. Cheng, Andrew M. Morris, Mark Loeb, Todd C. Lee. Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia mortality: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Clinical Microbiology and Infection. 2022. doi:10.1016/j.cmi.2022.03.015.
  2. ^  Sarah Tubiana, Xavier Duval, François Alla, Christine Selton-Suty, Pierre Tattevin, François Delahaye, Lionel Piroth, Catherine Chirouze, Jean-Philippe Lavigne, Marie-Line Erpelding, Bruno Hoen, François Vandenesch, Bernard Iung, Vincent Le Moing. The VIRSTA score, a prediction score to estimate risk of infective endocarditis and determine priority for echocardiography in patients with Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia. Journal of Infection. 2016;72(5):544-553. doi:10.1016/j.jinf.2016.02.003.
  3. ^  Thomas W van der Vaart, Jan M Prins, Robin Soetekouw, Gitte van Twillert, Jan Veenstra, Bjorn L Herpers, Wouter Rozemeijer, Rogier R Jansen, Marc J M Bonten, Jan T M van der Meer. Prediction Rules for Ruling Out Endocarditis in Patients With Staphylococcus aureus Bacteremia. Clinical Infectious Diseases. 2021;74(8):1442-1449. doi:10.1093/cid/ciab632.