Infective endocarditis is life-threatening; identification of the underlying etiology informs optimized individual patient management. Changing epidemiology, advances in blood culture techniques, and new diagnostics guide the application of laboratory testing for diagnosis of endocarditis. Blood cultures remain the standard test for microbial diagnosis, with directed serological testing (i.e., Q fever serology, Bartonella serology) in culture-negative cases. Histopathology and molecular diagnostics (e.g., 16S rRNA gene PCR/sequencing, Tropheryma whipplei PCR) may be applied to resected valves to aid in diagnosis. Herein, we summarize recent knowledge in this area and propose a microbiologic and pathological algorithm for endocarditis diagnosis.
KEYWORDS clinical microbiology, endocarditisD espite recent advances in diagnostic and therapeutic strategies, the mortality of infective endocarditis remains high, with more than one-third of patients affected dying within a year following diagnosis (1, 2). Identification of the specific underlying microbial etiology is essential for optimal patient management; delays in microbial diagnosis may contribute to late initiation of effective antimicrobial therapy, influencing morbidity and mortality. The modified Duke criteria provide a basic scheme for diagnosis and definition of endocarditis and rely on detection of infecting microorganisms in addition to echocardiographic and clinical findings (1, 3). The finding of two (or more) blood cultures positive for a typical microorganism consistent with infective endocarditis is a major criterion for infective endocarditis as is positive Q fever serology (anti-phase I IgG titer of Ն1:800). Echocardiographic findings are also considered but are beyond the scope of the manuscript.The epidemiology of endocarditis, which has shifted in recent years, should guide diagnostic testing. Today, staphylococci and streptococci combined cause ϳ80% of cases. Staphylococcus aureus remains the dominant pathogen, associated with ϳ25% to ϳ30% of cases, while coagulase-negative staphylococci account for ϳ11% of cases (4, 5). Streptococci, primarily viridans group streptococci, cause ϳ30% of cases, with Streptococcus gallolyticus (a Streptococcus bovis group member) being involved in ϳ20% to ϳ50% of streptococcal cases (4, 5). Enterococci, especially Enterococcus faecalis, account for ϳ10% of cases (4, 5). Gram-negative bacilli account for ϳ5% of cases and include the HACEK group organisms (Haemophilus, Aggregatibacter, Cardiobacterium, Eikenella, and Kingella species) and, less commonly, non-HACEK Gramnegative bacilli, such as the Enterobacteriaceae and nonfermenting Gram-negative bacilli. Fungi are rare endocarditis causes, with Candida species being the most common. A number of uncultivable or challenging to cultivate organisms cause endocarditis, the most common of which are Coxiella burnetii, Bartonella species, and Tropheryma whipplei.Endocarditis most often involves the aortic or mitral valves, with tricuspid valve involvement accoun...