Abstract

Abstract Introduction Antibiotic treatment for infective endocarditis is paramount typically consisting of intravenous therapy for up to eight weeks leading to long hospital stays. This often is associated with reduced quality of life for patients and might heighten complication rates. Recently, several trials evaluating the efficacy of partial oral treatment (switching to an oral antibiotic after an initial intravenous therapy for stabilization) versus an intravenous therapy were published. We here meta-analyze all available data. Methods and results Overall after screening 1848 studies at title and abstract level four studies including a total of 788 patients were included. Heterogeneity was assessed using the I2 statistic. Primary endpoint was all-cause mortality, secondary endpoint endocarditis relapse. Pooled event rates were obtained for each subset of studies and combined in a fixed-effect meta-analysis, and odds ratios were calculated using a fixed-effects model (Mantel-Haenszel). A total of 765 patients suffered from primary left-sided endocarditis. From right-sided endocarditis suffered 72 patients. All treatment regimes were adjusted to susceptibility testing. Included patients were evaluated clinically and non-critically ill. Rate of mortality was lower in partial oral versus intravenous strategy (OR 0.34 95% CI 0.17–0.68; p=0.003; I2 30%): In partial oral group, 11 of 379 patients died, whereas in the intravenous group, 33 of 409 patients died. Endocarditis relapse rates were not dissimilar between intravenous versus oral group (OR 0.55 95% CI 0.26–1.20; p=0.13; I2 0%) with, 10 of 459 patients in the partial oral group and 18 of 456 patients in the intravenous group evidencing a relapse. Conclusion Partial oral therapy is non-inferior to intravenous therapy with regards to endocarditis relapse in non-critically-ill patients suffering from both left- and right-sided endocarditis. In this meta-analysis, partial oral therapy was associated with lower mortality rates. This finding certainly needs validation in further future randomized trials comparing partial oral versus intravenous antibiotic treatment in non-critically-ill patients. As partial oral therapy allows shorter hospitalization it might be preferable and improve both quality of care and patients quality of life.

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