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Managing infective endocarditis in the elderly: new issues for an old disease

Authors Forestier E, Fraisse T, Roubaud-Baudron C, Selton-Suty C, Pagani L 

Received 5 December 2015

Accepted for publication 17 February 2016

Published 2 September 2016 Volume 2016:11 Pages 1199—1206

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/CIA.S101902

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 2

Editor who approved publication: Dr Richard Walker



Emmanuel Forestier,1 Thibaut Fraisse,2 Claire Roubaud-Baudron,3 Christine Selton-Suty,4 Leonardo Pagani5

1Infectious Diseases Department, Centre Hospitalier Métropole Savoie, Chambéry, France; 2Acute Geriatric Department, Centre Hospitalier, Alès, France; 3Geriatric Department, University Hospital, Bordeaux, France; 4Department of Cardiology, University Hospital, Nancy, France; 5Infectious Diseases Department, Centre Hospitalier Annecy-Genevois, Annecy, France

Abstract: The incidence of infective endocarditis (IE) rises in industrialized countries. Older people are more affected by this severe disease, notably because of the increasing number of invasive procedures and intracardiac devices implanted in these patients. Peculiar clinical and echocardiographic features, microorganisms involved, and prognosis of IE in elderly have been underlined in several studies. Additionally, elderly population appears quite heterogeneous, from healthy people without past medical history to patients with multiple diseases or who are even bedridden. However, the management of IE in this population has been poorly explored, and international guidelines do not recommend adapting the therapeutic strategy to the patient’s functional status and comorbidities. Yet, if IE should be treated according to current recommendations in the healthiest patients, concerns may rise for older patients who suffer from several chronic diseases, especially renal failure, and are on polypharmacy. Treating frailest patients with high-dose intravenous antibiotics during a prolonged hospital stay as recommended for younger patients could also expose them to functional decline and toxic effect. Likewise, the place of surgery according to the aging characteristics of each patient is unclear. The aim of this article is to review the recent data on epidemiology of IE and its peculiarities in the elderly. Then, its management and various therapeutic approaches that can be considered according to and beyond guidelines depending on patient comorbidities and frailty are discussed.

Keywords: infective endocarditis, elderly, antibiotic therapy, cardiac surgery, frailty

Introduction

Infective endocarditis (IE) is a rare but severe disease that increasingly involves older patients: more than one-third is indeed over 70 years old in Western countries nowadays.1,2 In this patient setting, IE displays several peculiarities, as predisposing cardiac conditions, clinical and echocardiographic features, and microorganisms involved. The mortality also tends to be higher than in the general population.36 Nevertheless, age itself is not a good surrogate marker to define a unique population. Aging is a heterogeneous process resulting in a wide spectrum of aged people profiles, from perfectly healthy to bedridden ones. So, in case of infection, a comprehensive geriatric assessment (nutritional, functional, and cognitive) is certainly necessary to evaluate and predict outcome, but also to guide treatment.7 However, none of the international guidelines tackles the management of IE in the elderly, and to what extent they can be applied to these patients remains poorly evaluated.811 Yet, if healthiest elderly suffering from IE should be managed according to such recommendations, therapeutic strategy certainly requires adaptation in frail patients.

The aim of this article is to review the recent data on epidemiology of IE and its peculiarities in the elderly. Its management and various therapeutic approaches according to patient comorbidities and frailty are also discussed. It is not intended as a systematic review or a meta-analysis, but a summary of the most recent acquisitions about an emerging clinical concern for elders. Therefore, we performed a search in PubMed for terms such as “infective endocarditis,” “infective endocarditis AND aged,” “endocarditis AND geriatric,” “endocarditis treatment.” Then the authors selected the most relevant papers (in their opinion) focusing on this peculiar disease in the geriatric setting (over 65 years), aiming at summarizing the present advances, unmet needs, and potential solutions.

Recent epidemiological trends

Patients involved

The incidence of IE in the general population has slightly increased since the 1980s in industrialized countries. The incidence of IE was close to 20 in a study performed in France in 1991, whereas it is now estimated around 30–90 per million inhabitants.12,13 Overall, males are mostly involved with a sex-ratio exceeding 2:1.13 Concordant epidemiological studies showed that the rising incidence of IE mostly occurred in elderly population.1,2,14 Mean age of patients increased from 45.3 years in 1980s to 57.2 years in 2000s, according to a literature review.2 Moreover, in a large French observational study performed in 2008, patients aged 70 or older represented 38.7% of cases of IE, and the peak of incidence for male patients was between 75 and 79 years, reaching 194 cases per million of inhabitants.1 This trend is first explained by aging of the general population. Age-related degenerative valvular damages are now the most frequently involved underlying heart lesions.6 The increasing number of cardiovascular electronic devices, prosthetic valves implants, transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI), along with frequent invasive diagnostic or therapeutic procedures performed in elderly, may also contribute to the rise of IE in this population and especially of health care-associated (HA) IE. Indeed, in a large international cohort of IE prospectively followed up in the early 2000s, more than half of elderly patients reported invasive procedures in the 6 months preceding the occurrence of IE.6 In another study, HA IE accounted for 34% of the cases, and in the study by Selton-Suty et al, the increased incidence of IE in older patients was mostly attributable to HA IE.1,15

Microorganisms responsible for IE

Although oral streptococci were previously responsible for most cases of IE in elderly, recent studies demonstrated that staphylococci are now mainly involved, Staphylococcus aureus being predominant.1,2,14,16 Methicillin-resistant S. aureus is often found in older patients.6 This epidemiological trend is likely linked to the increasing incidence of HA IE. On the other hand, the frequency of IE caused by streptococci colonizing the digestive tract like Streptococcus gallolyticus and enterococci also increases because of the higher incidence of colonic lesions in elderly patients. Conversely, IE due to other microorganisms, such as Enterobacteriaceae and fungi, or negative blood culture IE remain rare.1,4,6,15

Peculiarities of IE in the elderly

Main data on predisposing conditions, clinical presentation, echocardiographic data, surgical and medical treatment, and morbidity and mortality are globally concordant across studies on IE in elderly.36,1720 However, these results are sometimes contradictory to some extent, due to differences in methods and the heterogeneous definition of elderly patients that ranged from over 64 to over 75 years.

IE occurs mainly in older patients suffering from multiple comorbidities. Diabetes, gastrointestinal or genitourinary cancer, or multiple chronic illnesses are found in more than half of elderly patients with IE.5,6 The presumed portal of entry of the pathogen is indeed more frequently the digestive or urinary tract. Mitral regurgitation, nonrheumatic aortic stenosis, prosthetic valve, and intracardiac devices are the most frequent conditions predisposing to IE in this population: among IE patients ≥65-years old included in a large international cohort study, almost 20% had a pacemaker or an automatic implantable defibrillator.1,6 A concern has also recently emerged with IE complicating TAVI.21,22 Its incidence was 0.7% among patients implanted in a recent retrospective study in North America, 75% of IE occurring within the year following the procedure.21 The two risk factors for IE found in this study were orotracheal intubation and the use of a self-expandable CoreValve system.

Clinical presentation of IE in elderly is often nonspecific, consisting in general symptoms such as fatigue, weight loss, or confusion. Fever seems to be as common as in younger patients and time between onset of symptoms and diagnosis was rather shorter in patients over 75 years in Remadi et al’s study.5 Immunological events (Osler nodules, Roth spots, and Janeway lesions) and embolic complications such as strokes, intracranial hemorrhages, or mycotic aneurysms are likely less frequent.6 This observation should nevertheless be considered with caution since these last complications could be less systematically assessed in elderly.

Echocardiographic data also exhibit some specificity: mitral valve is more frequently affected, vegetations and valve defects are less frequent, whereas peri-valvular abscesses are more often found.4,6 Transesophageal echocardiography could therefore lead to a significant diagnostic gain in older patients. However, cooperation of elderly patients for transesophageal echocardiography may be difficult because of cognitive disorder or agitation. Resorting to sedation or general anesthesia is also risky when patients have poly-medication or multiple comorbidities.

The impact of IE on functional status in elderly has not been studied to date. Only one study has shown that age ≥60 years was associated with a decreased quality of life 12 months after IE.23 Lethality tends to be higher than in the general population: it ranges from 16% to 45% in patients aged 65 years or older. It could be even higher in case of IE following TAVI, reaching 66% at 1-year follow-up, including 47% of in-hospital mortality, in Amat-Santos et al’s study.21 Age appears as a major risk factor for death regardless of concomitant comorbidities.1,36,18,20 There is no clear explanation to this observation. Thorough geriatric assessment was never performed in IE studies. Therefore, the influence of functional and socioeconomic status on IE management (medical or surgical) and attributable morbidity or mortality could not be evaluated. Elderly patients might die from worsening concomitant comorbidities. They may also experience more complications from the medical and surgical management. Conversely, other studies showed that elderly patients undergo heart surgery less frequently than younger patients, which could constitute a loss of chance.36

Management of IE in the elderly

Considering aging issues

Aging is a heterogeneous process that leads to a wide variety of patient profiles ranging from healthy aging (without any comorbidity or disability) to bedridden patients. In between there is a continuum from frail patients with comorbidities and altered functional, nutritional, and cognitive statuses. Frailty is defined as a wasting syndrome accompanied by increased vulnerability to functional disability, morbidity, and mortality. It is a transitional state that should be recognized to prevent or treat the trigger event that will in turn precipitate functional decline of a single organ or global functional status.24 Considering frailty becomes essential to determine in which category of aging phenotype an elderly patient could be classified, to evaluate his/her physiological reserve, and then to assess suitability for intensive medical or surgical procedures, such as TAVI.25 Likewise, the well know Fried criteria assessing frailty (involuntary weight loss, weakness, self-reported exhaustion, low physical activity, or slow walking speed) were recently evaluated for therapeutic decision-making regarding renal replacement in elderly patients with advanced chronic kidney disease.26,27

Assessing frailty also seems crucial to guide treatment in severe infectious diseases, such as IE. Yet, no studies have evaluated the functional status as a risk factor and an outcome measure in this field.7 The recent guidelines on IE indicate that the treatment must be based on a medical and surgical approach in most cases, but there is no recommendation dedicated to elderly.811 Although patients who had a healthy aging should be managed according to these guidelines as do younger patients, others, from frail to bedridden ones, probably deserve an adapted care. For example, among the several options available for antibiotic therapy of IE, some may be preferred to others in patients with multiple comorbidities for the lower likelihood of toxicity or side effects. Alternative therapeutic strategies might also be considered in those patients, as the objectives would be not only treatment efficacy but also prevention of untoward effects. Regarding surgery, European guidelines10 recommend assessing the operative risk using several scores and considering the patient’s comorbidities and clinical status, but they do not provide any specific tools. Since recommendations do not answer all the issues encountered when managing IE in elderly, the goal of this section is to provide suggestions to help clinicians adapt the medical and surgical treatment according to patient aging profile. Table 1 summarizes these proposals.

Table 1 Adaptation and alternatives to 2015 guidelines on IE suggested according to elder’s comorbidities and functional status10,11
Note: Data from Habib et al10 and Baddour et al.11
Abbreviations: IE, infective endocarditis; MRSA, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus; TTE, Trans-thoracic echocardiography.

Antibiotic therapy

According to the European Society of Cardiology10 and American Heart Association,11 antibiotic therapy of IE relies on monotherapy or combination (as appropriate) of bactericidal drugs active on the microorganism involved, administered intravenously, at high dosage and for up to 6 weeks. The objective is to eradicate the slow growing bacteria present in vegetations and biofilm that exhibit tolerance to most antibiotics. Conversely, aging is associated with various physiologic changes corresponding to aging of each organ and induces pharmacokinetic modifications.28 The most important modifications for antibiotic pharmacokinetics in elders are fat mass increase, nephronic loss, and albumin level modification. The modification of fat mass level that increases with age modifies the volume of distribution of antibiotic according to their lipophilic or hydrophilic properties. Decreased albumin level may impair transport of highly protein-bound drugs and therefore the drug-free fraction.

Elderly patients have also a lower renal clearance, as renal function progressively decreases with age. This will lead to an increased risk of nephrotoxicity or systemic adverse events when choosing renally cleared antimicrobials without dosing adjustment. Clinicians should be aware that elderly patients suffering from diabetes, or using diuretics and ACE inhibitors, are more prone to develop acute kidney injury caused by nephrotoxic drugs, such as aminoglycosides or vancomycin.28,29 Physiologic changes occurring with aging could modify antibiotic pharmacokinetics by themselves and favor overdose, leading for example to neurotoxic effect in patients with cognitive disorders.28 Conversely, an excess of precaution may induce an underdosing and a decreased efficacy. Given their bactericidal activity and safety, penicillins are the antibiotics of choice against susceptible strains of staphylococci and streptococci. Higher dosages are necessary, and dosing interval should be reduced to 4 hours to target stable serum concentration above minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) over 24 hours.30 Continuous infusion may also be advantageous but remains to be validated.31 In case of methicillin-resistant S. aureus or in patients allergic to β-lactams, vancomycin is universally accepted as the first-line drug. It can be administered by intermittent or continuous infusion, which was proven to be effective and less toxic.32 Teicoplanin, recommended only by the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy guidelines, could also be considered, as it has a lower renal toxicodynamic profile than vancomycin and a very long half-life, allowing once-daily injection or even a thrice-weekly administration; it is slightly more active than vancomycin against enterococci as well.9,33 Daptomycin, a rapidly bactericidal cyclic lipopeptide, has been validated to treat right-sided staphylococcal endocarditis and seems to be well tolerated in the elderly population.34,35 It is much more expensive than vancomycin, but it could be considered the drug of choice in patients with severely impaired renal function, and in case of IE affecting cardiac implantable electronic devices for its proven activity against bacterial biofilm.911,13

Combination antimicrobial treatment may facilitate bacterial clearance. Rifampin in combination with penicillin or vancomycin is strongly recommended in cases of staphylococcal prosthetic valve endocarditis or intravascular device infection.811 But several drug–drug interactions and frequent digestive side effects complicate its use in patients under polypharmacy. The interest of aminoglycosides is increasingly debated, especially for older patients, despite their rapid and strong bactericidal activity. A recent meta-analysis showed no benefit from combination therapy with aminoglycosides compared to β-lactam monotherapy for treating IE, while renal function declined more likely with the former regimen.36 In patients over 75 years, aminoglycosides treatment longer than 3 days is associated with increased nephrotoxicity.29 Thus, the synergistic interaction of aminoglycosides with β-lactams might be relevant in elderly only in cases of staphylococcal prosthetic valve endocarditis. In case of enterococcal endocarditis, amoxicillin could be combined to ceftriaxone rather than to gentamycin, especially in elderly patients at risk of or with renal impairment. This regimen is recommended in the 2015 guidelines10,11 as in two studies that included mainly old patients, it appeared effective and safe, and much less toxic than aminoglycoside-containing regimens.10,11,37,38 Likewise, one single daily aminoglycoside administration should now be preferred according to the last European guidelines, since it is associated with lower nephrotoxicity than split injections.10 This is especially true in elderly with or at risk of impaired renal function.3942 Monitoring drug serum concentrations to attain therapeutic levels and avoid overdose or underdose could be useful. It is especially mandatory to manage efficacy of aminoglycosides (peak concentration) and prevent toxicity of aminoglycosides and glycopeptides (trough concentration).42,43

Functional decline is one of the most important risks arising from a prolonged hospitalization in elderly patients, particularly in those with cognitive disorders. Outpatient parenteral antibiotic therapy can limit this risk allowing early discharge of patients, and it appears safe and cost-effective, provided that it is performed in optimal conditions.4448 According to guidelines, it could be considered after 1 week of antibiotic therapy in streptococcal endocarditis and after 2 weeks in other cases. Infection has to be under control, and the patient must not experience heart failure, neurological signs, renal impairment, surgical indication, or concerns about echocardiographic findings.911,49 A careful evaluation of the patient’s social environment is important for supervision of treatment and complications of IE. Once or twice daily antibiotic regimens (ceftriaxone, teicoplanin, or daptomycin) should be preferred, but continuous cloxacillin or vancomycin could also be used. Venous access should be discussed before discharge from hospital (peripherally inserted central catheter [PICC], peripheral catheter, or direct intravenous injection), and close monitoring of patients should be organized along the whole ambulatory treatment.

Although intravenous route is the only recommended method to administer antibiotics for IE, maintaining a venous access for weeks could be a major concern in elderly. Cognitive disorders or confusion associated with agitation could compromise intravenous device retention. Long-term intravascular devices such as PICC can be complicated with thrombosis or superinfection. Thus, hypodermoclysis, which was developed to give fluid replacement or drug to geriatric patients, may be an alternative. 5052 This practice appears common among French infectious disease physicians and geriatricians, whereas there are only few data on subcutaneous administration of antibiotics.53 Ceftriaxone is the most used antibiotic for subcutaneous injection in France and appears really interesting to treat streptococcal native valve IE. However, very few pharmacokinetic and clinical data are available until now.5457 Teicoplanin has also been used subcutaneously with very scarce published data.58,59 Conversely, aminoglycosides are sometimes used via subcutaneous route, but we do not recommend this for the important risk of skin necrosis and lack of efficacy.29,53,6062 An oral antibiotic regimen might also be considered after initial intravenous therapy. Antibiotic must then have a good bioavailability (absorption) and diffusion, as do fluoroquinolones plus rifampin, or more recent drugs such as linezolid. However, this strategy relies on only a few observational and small-sized studies and thus remains to be validated.63

Surgical treatment

Surgery is often necessary in addition to antibiotic therapy to treat IE, either in case of severe valvular damage responsible for heart failure, extended vegetation at risk of systemic embolism, or uncontrolled infection.10,11 It is considered mandatory for prosthetic valve endocarditis, especially caused by S. aureus. Likewise, removing an infected intravascular device is strongly recommended. Nevertheless, surgery could be rarely performed in case of IE complicating TAVI, a procedure used as an alternative to open heart surgery in disabled elderly.21,22 Timing of surgery is still a matter of debate.64 Besides the cases of life-threatening complications, which make valvular surgery emergent, whether it should be performed early in the course of the disease or delayed should be discussed case-by-case.911

Age per se is not a contraindication to surgery. One study showed that elderly could benefit from surgery with mortality reaching 61% in case of medical treatment alone compared with 39% for patients who underwent surgery.6 These results must be interpreted with caution since the operated patients probably had better baseline conditions. However, surgery should be systematically discussed for each patient: a careful multidisciplinary evaluation is essential to evaluate the benefit and the risk of the procedure. Several scores were developed to predict early mortality after cardiac surgery (Table 2).6569 They could be an interesting tool to decide whether a patient should undergo cardiac surgery or not in case of IE. However, most of those scores were created to screen patients before elective valve replacement or coronary-arterial bypass grafting, which is obviously different from the urgent or semi-urgent surgery performed in case of IE. Then, the European guidelines also suggest using the Society of Thoracic Surgeons Endocarditis Score and the De Feo et al score, which are dedicated to surgery in IE but were evaluated only in a small number of patients.10,65,66 Additionally, none of these scores included a comprehensive geriatric assessment, whereas the European recommendations10 concede that practical indications for surgery in IE are unclear and mainly rely on the patient’s clinical status and comorbidities. Only one study evaluated the potential interest of adding frailty and disability to cardiac surgery-risk scores to identify elderly patients at high risk of mortality or major morbidity, but before elective surgery excluding IE.70 In this prospective multicenter study that included 152 patients aged 70 years or over, authors showed that addition of frailty (measured by 5 m gait speed in 6 seconds) and disability (evaluated by ≥3 impairments in the Nagi scale) improved model discrimination compared with Parsonnet score or the Society of Thoracic Surgeons Predicted Risk of Mortality or Major Morbidity (a different score from the Society of Thoracic Surgeons Endocarditis Score cited earlier) alone.68,69 Thus, in addition to cardiologists, infectious disease specialists, cardiac surgeons, and anesthesiologists, geriatricians should certainly play a major role to more accurately identify patients who would benefit from surgery or not in case of IE.

Table 2 Characteristics of risk scores predicting mortality or morbidity after cardiac surgery
Abbreviations: IE, infective endocarditis; STS-PROMM, Society of Thoracic Surgeons Predicted Risk of Mortality or Major Morbidity; N/A, not applicable; STS-IE, Society of Thoracic Surgeons-Infective Endocarditis.

Other components of treatment

Comorbidities and polypharmacy are very common in elderly, and IE care should not be focused only on antibiotic administration and surgery. Of note, antiplatelet and anticoagulant agents are commonly prescribed in elderly patients. The European and American recommendations give indications on the management of antiplatelet therapy and anticoagulation during IE.10,11 Antiplatelet agents should be stopped only in the presence of major bleeding. In case of intracranial hemorrhage, any anticoagulation should be withdrawn. In the presence of a mechanical valve, unfractionated heparin should be restarted as soon as possible with close monitoring of clot tests. In ischemic stroke without hemorrhage, oral anticoagulation should be replaced by unfractionated heparin.

Conclusion

IE is becoming more common in elderly population with peculiarities in patient characteristics and bacteria involved. This evolution raises new issues and leads clinicians to deal with specific problems in the management of this severe disease. The elders’ characteristics (performance status, disability) and their impact on the treatment and the prognosis of IE may deserve great attention. Geriatricians should be more involved in this perspective. Available guidelines could be applied to fit elderly patients, but specific recommendations may certainly be necessary for the frailest ones. Therefore, improving our knowledge on specificity of IE in elderly is essential, and further studies focusing on these patients are necessary to explore those specific points.

Disclosure

The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.


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