Abstract

ObjectivesTo assess possible differences in clinical presentation, microbiology, morbidity and mortality of infective endocarditis between two Spanish hospitals, one on the mainland that has cardiac surgery and one in the Canary Islands without this service. MethodA total of 229patients consecutively diagnosed of endocarditis between 2005 and 2012, including pediatric population, were studied in the Reina Sofía Hospital (Córdoba, n=119) and Nuestra Señora de Candelaria Hospital (Tenerife, n=110). We compared the clinical, microbiological and echocardiographic data and analyzed mortality differences by binary logistic regression analysis. ResultsThere were no differences in underlying heart disease, proportion of surgery, or the microbiological profile. The proportion of infections attributable to catheter was higher in the Canary Islands hospital (13.6% vs 3.4%). Mortality was also higher (31.8% vs 18.5%, P=.020), although this difference was no longer significant in the multivariate analysis (OR=1.85; 95%CI, 0.70-4.87; P=.213). Age (OR=1.04/year; 95%CI, 1.01-1.07; P=.006), cardiac complications (OR=5.05; 95%CI, 1.78-14.34; P=.002), persistent sepsis (OR=4.89; 95%CI, 2.09-11.46; P<.001), and emergent surgery (OR=4.43, 95%CI, 1.75-11.19; P=.002) were independent predictors of death. Time to surgery, length of stay in the hospital without a surgical service (20 [13-30.5] vs 13 [6-25] days; P=.019) was not associated with outcome. ConclusionsThere are differences in the presentation of endocarditis between two distant hospitals in Spain. The different hospital mortality can not be directly related to the presence of a surgery service.

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