Abstract

Coagulase-negative staphylococci (CoNS) are an emergent aetiology of infective endocarditis (IE) on native valves in previously healthy individuals, its presence is associated with prosthetic valves or with other cardiac implants. The identification of CoNS in cultures was customarily seen as contamination, but more recent epidemiological studies have revealed an increasing number of causative and virulent new CoNS species. Starting from two clinical cases of community-acquired CoNS IE on native valves, the review debates the difficulties in identifying CoNS as the causal pathogens, comprising differentiation of contamination from infection in IE, alongside the challenges raised by antibiotic resistance. Even if the risk of CoNS IE is more increased in subjects with prosthetic materials or other foreign devices and immunodeficiencies, native valve infections with these staphylococci are increasing and should be considered important pathogens in IE. Despite the lack of sensitive and specific tools to correctly differentiate contamination from infection in CoNS endocarditis, a comprehensive evaluation with clinical and paraclinical data accurately succeeds in establishing the diagnosis. The genetic profile of CoNS predisposes to antibiotic multi-resistance, making the treatment of IE challenging; the rapid identification of antibiotic susceptibility is essential to prescribe the appropriate therapy and improve outcomes.

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