Cardiac Surgery for Treatment of COVID-19–Associated Infectious Endocarditis

Author:

Taghizadeh-Waghefi Ali1,Petrov Asen1,Wilbring Manuel1,Alexiou Konstantin1,Kappert Utz1,Matschke Klaus1,Tugtekin Sems-Malte1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiac Surgery, University Heart Center Dresden, Dresden, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Background Significant uncertainty exists about the optimal timing of surgery for infectious endocarditis (IE) surgery in patients with active SARS-CoV-2 infection. This case series and a systematic review of the literature were carried out to evaluate the timing of surgery and postsurgical outcomes for patients with COVID-19–associated IE. Methods The PubMed database was searched for reports published from June 20, 2020, to June 24, 2021, that contained the terms infective endocarditis and COVID-19. A case series of 8 patients from the authors' facility was also added. Results A total of 12 cases were included, including 4 case reports that met inclusion criteria in addition to a case series of 8 patients from the authors' facility. Mean (SD) patient age was 61.9 (17.1) years, and patients were predominantly male (91.7%). Being overweight was the main comorbidity among patients studied (7/8 [87.5%]). Among all patients evaluated in this study, dyspnea (n = 8 [66.7%]) was the leading symptom, followed by fever (n = 7 [58.3%]). Enterococcus faecalis and Staphylococcus aureus caused 75.0% of COVID-19–associated IE. The mean (SD) time to surgery was 14.5 (15.6) days (median, 13 days). In-hospital and 30-day mortality for all evaluated patients was 16.7% (n = 2). Conclusion Clinicians must carefully assess patients diagnosed with COVID-19 to prevent missing underlying diseases such as IE. If IE is suspected, clinicians should avoid postponement of crucial diagnostic and treatment steps.

Publisher

Texas Heart Institute Journal

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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