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The Microbiology of Infective Native Aortic Aneurysms in a Population-Based Setting

Authors :
Roberta Vaccarino
Conny Arnerlöv
Håkan Roos
S. Mellander
G Simo
A. Öjersjö
Kevin Mani
T. Wetterling
Mia Furebring
J. Magnusson
M. Chu
Håkan Åstrand
Mari Holsti
Linda Bilos
Carl-Magnus Wahlgren
M. Huss
D. Korman
Anders Wanhainen
Bengt Arvidsson
David Lindström
Karl Sörelius
O. Nelzén
C. Drott
T. Resch
M. Palm
Khatereh Djavani-Gidlund
Artai Pirouzram
A. Bertszel
Peter Gillgren
M. Svensson
M. Docter
N-P. Gilgen
Rebecka Hultgren
Source :
Annals of vascular surgery. 78
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Objective The aim was to describe the microbiology of surgically treated infective native (mycotic) aortic aneurysms (INAAs), and associated survival and development of infection-related complications (IRCs). Methods Data were pooled from 2 nationwide studies on surgically treated patients with INAAs in Sweden, between 1994 – 2016. Patients were grouped and analyzed according to culture results: 1) Staphylococcus aureus, 2) Streptococcus species (sp.), 3) Salmonella sp., 4) Enterococcus sp., 5) Gram-negative intestinal bacteria, 6) Other sp. (all other species found in culture), and 7) Negative cultures. Results A sum of 182 patients were included, mean age 71 years (standard deviation; SD: 8.9). The median follow-up was 50.3 months (range 0 – 360). 128 (70.3%) patients had positive blood and/or tissue culture; Staphylococcus aureus n = 38 (20.9%), Streptococcus sp. n = 37 (20.3%), Salmonella sp. n = 19 (10.4%), Enterococcus sp. n = 16 (8.8%), Gram-negative intestinal bacteria n = 6, (3.3%), Other sp. n = 12 (6.6%) and Negative cultures n = 54 (29.7%). The estimated survival for the largest groups at 2-years after surgery was: Staphylococcus aureus 62% (95% Confidence interval 53.9 – 70.1), Streptococcus sp. 74.7% (67.4 – 82.0), Salmonella sp. 73.7% (63.6 – 83.8), Enterococcus sp. 61.9% (49.6 – 74.2), and Negative cultures 89.8% (85.5 – 94.1), P = .051. There were 37 IRCs (20.3%), and 19 (51.4%) were fatal, the frequency was insignificant between the groups. The majority of IRCs, 30/37 (81%), developed during the first postoperative year. Conclusion In this assessment of microbiological findings of INAAs in Sweden, 50% of the pathogens were Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus sp., or Salmonella sp.. The overall 20%-frequency of IRCs, and its association with high mortality, motivates long-term antibiotic treatment regardless of microbial findings.

Details

ISSN :
16155947
Volume :
78
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of vascular surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eb3c11c89918c8c3d1c98b3c99de0408