Article Text

Expert consensus recommendations for the provision of infective endocarditis services: updated guidance from the Joint British Societies
  1. Jonathan A T Sandoe1,2,
  2. Fozia Ahmed3,4,
  3. Parthiban Arumugam3,
  4. Achyut Guleri5,
  5. Carolyne Horner6,
  6. Philip Howard7,8,
  7. John Perry9,
  8. Bernard D Prendergast10,11,
  9. Ralph Schwiebert1,12,
  10. Richard Paul Steeds13,
  11. Richard Watkin14,
  12. Olaf Wendler15,
  13. John B Chambers10
  1. 1 Microbiology department, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Leeds, UK
  2. 2 Leeds Institute of Medical Research, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
  3. 3 Manchester Heart Centre, Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK
  4. 4 The University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
  5. 5 Microbiology department, Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust, Wakefield, UK
  6. 6 Formerly British Society of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy, Birmingham, UK
  7. 7 NHS England North East & Yorkshire, Leeds, UK
  8. 8 University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
  9. 9 Microbiology department, Newcastle Upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK
  10. 10 Cardiology department, Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK
  11. 11 Cleveland Clinic, London, UK
  12. 12 School of Medicine, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
  13. 13 Cardiology department, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham, UK
  14. 14 Cardiology department, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, Sutton Coldfield, UK
  15. 15 Cardiothoracic Surgery, King's College Hospital, King's Health Partners, London, UK
  1. Correspondence to Dr Jonathan A T Sandoe, Microbiology, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Leeds, LS9 7TF, UK; j.sandoe{at}leeds.ac.uk

Abstract

Infective endocarditis (IE) remains a difficult condition to diagnose and treat and is an infection of high consequence for patients, causing long hospital stays, life-changing complications and high mortality. A new multidisciplinary, multiprofessional, British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy (BSAC)-ledWorking Party was convened to undertake a focused systematical review of the literature and to update the previous BSAC guidelines relating delivery of services for patients with IE. A scoping exercise identified new questions concerning optimal delivery of care, and the systematic review identified 16 231 papers of which 20 met the inclusion criteria. Recommendations relating to endocarditis teams, infrastructure and support, endocarditis referral processes, patient follow-up and patient information, and governance are made as well as research recommendations. This is a report of a joint Working Party of the BSAC, British Cardiovascular Society, British Heart Valve Society, British Society of Echocardiography, Society of Cardiothoracic Surgeons of Great Britain and Ireland, British Congenital Cardiac Association and British Infection Association.

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Introduction

In 2012, the Endocarditis Working Party of the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy (BSAC) published updated guidelines for the treatment of endocarditis.1 Given the significant progress in the field, a new multidisciplinary and multiprofessional BSAC Working Party was convened to systematically review the literature and update the previous guideline where appropriate. This statement includes native valve endocarditis (NVE) and prosthetic valve endocarditis (PVE). For the purposes of this guideline ‘PVE’ includes prosthetic valves of all types, annuloplasty rings, intracardiac patches, aortic root grafts and patches, and shunts. There is some overlap with management of implantable cardiac electronic device infections, but many issues have been previously addressed elsewhere.2

Infective endocarditis (IE) remains a difficult condition to diagnose with a high mortality. Patients with IE can present with a wide variety of symptoms, signs and complications and are consequently managed by teams from a wide variety of specialties. In the UK, patients with IE may present acutely to district general hospitals or to a heart centre (hospital with a cardiac surgical unit). Only patients living in the immediate catchment of a heart centre are likely be admitted directly to a heart centre. Detailed data on place of presentation are lacking, but a recent study from a heart centre in London found the vast majority of patients were transferred from district general hospitals.3 Clinicians with primary responsibility for a patient with IE may have relatively little experience of management of the condition, regardless of whether the patient is based in a heart centre or district general hospital. There are consultant cardiologists and microbiologists working in most district general hospitals in the UK. In this update, the Working Party initially aimed to provide recommendations concerning service provision for patients with suspected or confirmed IE to promote a standardised approach to this important clinical condition, improve networking and patient outcomes. The need for this statement and specific recommendations comes from opinion leaders and colleagues working in the UK National Health Service (NHS) with the specific challenges found in the NHS. There are clear differences in the epidemiology of IE between continents and countries.4 While this statement is intended for the NHS, the findings of the literature review and UK approach are likely to be of interest to an international audience.

Updates on antibiotic treatment and imaging in IE will be covered in separate documents. Antibiotic prophylaxis against IE is covered by National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guideline CG64.

Methods

The starting point for this review was the previous 2012 guideline, and we sought evidence that warranted a change from previous recommendations.1 The Working Party was recruited from the BSAC membership and specialist cardiology societies that might wish to be involved in the preparation of the guideline, each society nominating a participant following approval from their respective governance structures. Other members were invited to ensure diverse expert and non-expert representation, including infection specialists, cardiologists, cardiac surgeons, pharmacists, laboratory scientists, and a patient and public representative. The joint Working Party comprised members of the BSAC, the British Cardiovascular Society, the British Heart Valve Society, the British Society of Echocardiography, the Society of Cardiothoracic Surgeons of Great Britain and Ireland, and the British Infection Association. The British Congenital Cardiac Association joined later in the processes and contributed to the final guideline. During a face-to-face meeting, an initial scoping exercise was undertaken by Working Party members to identify key clinical questions concerning the delivery of specialist IE services to patients in the UK NHS, followed by round-table discussion to determine and prioritise principal guideline topics. A systematic review of the literature was undertaken (see online supplemental file for search strategy and methods for screening and selection of papers for inclusion), followed by development of initial recommendations from the literature review and identification of important areas where published data were lacking. Draft recommendations were then proposed to the wider Working Party and iterated until consensus was achieved. As per previous guidelines,1 evidence levels to support recommendations were graded as follows: A, based on high-quality evidence from systematic reviews of randomised controlled trials; B, based on observational studies; and C, based on expert consensus. After consensus was reached within the Working Party, the guideline was circulated to stakeholder organisations, as well as the Department of Health Advisory Committee for Antimicrobial Prescribing, Resistance and Healthcare Associated Infections, for comment.Each comment was addressed by the Working Party and the guideline was amended accordingly. Once recommendations had been agreed, an audit tool was developed, based on the recommendations.

Supplemental material

Results

The scoping exercise for this guideline revision identified new questions concerning optimal delivery of care for patients with IE. The first questions were (1) how should IE services be delivered? (2) what outpatient follow-up should be provided? and (3) what information should be given to patients? After excluding duplicates, 16 231 papers relating to IE were identified, of which 20 were related to delivery of IE services and met the inclusion criteria. The findings of these papers were categorised into broad themes: endocarditis teams, infrastructure and support, referral processes, patient follow-up and information, and governance. Eight studies involved adults only and 12 did not state age inclusion or exclusion criteria. No study explicitly included children. The audit tool is shown in table 1. Results of the risk of bias assessment are shown in online supplemental file 2.

Supplemental material

Table 1

Audit tool to assess compliance with current infective endocarditis service delivery guidelines

Recommendations

Endocarditis teams

Recommendation 4.1.1

All hospitals involved in the care of patients with confirmed or suspected IE should have an IE team. (C)

Recommendation 4.1.2

The IE team should include as a minimum, an infection specialist and a cardiologist who is an accredited specialist in echocardiography (or a cardiologist and an additional accredited specialist in echocardiography who can be a cardiologist or clinical physiologist/scientist). (C)

Recommendation 4.1.3

At heart centres (hospitals with cardiac surgical units), there should also be access to cardiac surgeons and cardiologists with expertise in the removal of infected implantable cardiac electronic devices. (C)

Recommendation 4.1.4

At heart centres, where patients with adult congenital heart disease (ACHD) are managed, there should also be access to a cardiologist with ACHD expertise. (C)

Recommendation 4.1.5

The IE team should have access to paediatric infection specialists and paediatric cardiologists (unless there is a paediatric IE team). (C)

Recommendation 4.1.6

Local guidelines should be in place to guide diagnosis, investigation, and the empirical and directed antibiotic therapy of suspected/confirmed IE. (B)

Recommendation 4.1.7

In addition to routine daily clinical care, there should be regular (at least weekly) IE team review of patients with confirmed or suspected IE (in the form of a multidisciplinary team (MDT) meeting and/or bedside patient review). Additional ad hoc MDT meetings may be needed to manage emergencies (C)

Recommendation 4.1.8

All IE teams should have access to advice from an antimicrobial or infection specialist pharmacist. (C)

Infrastructure and support

Recommendation 4.2.1

Hospitals managing patients with confirmed or suspected IE should have rapid access to cardiac surgical services, that is, the ability to transfer patients to a heart centre 24 hours a day, 7 days a week—these heart centres should provide same-day (within 24 hours) surgery if needed. (C)

Recommendation 4.2.2

Operating schedules should allow for emergency (within 24 hours) or urgent (within 2 days) surgery in patients with IE. (C)

Recommendation 4.2.3

Surgery/interventions for ACHD-related IE should be performed in ACHD level 1 units—as per National Health Service England(NHSE) National Standards—unless agreed otherwise by the ACHD MDT. (C)

Recommendation 4.2.4

Heart centres should have access to advice from specialists in the following areas: spinal surgery, neurology, neurosurgery, renal medicine, radiology (with specialist interest in cardiac imaging) and antimicrobial pharmacy. (C)

Recommendation 4.2.5

All hospitals managing patients with suspected or confirmed IE should have on site access to transthoracic and transoesophageal echocardiography. (C)

Recommendation 4.2.6

All IE teams should have timely (within 1 week) access to MRI, CT scanning, and fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET)/CT scanning [C]

Recommendation 4.2.7

Substance misuse teams should be available to support people who inject drugs (PWID) and have IE. (C)

Recommendation 4.2.8

IE teams should have administrative support to help with documentation of referrals/MDT outcomes and MDT organisation. (C)

Referral processes

Recommendation 4.3.1

All patients with IE presenting to referring hospitals should be discussed with the IE team at the heart centre to allow decisions regarding clinical management and inter-hospital transfer. Discussions should involve a clinician responsible for the patient. (C)

Recommendation 4.3.2

Results of relevant imaging should be shared with the heart centre and reviewed as part of clinical decision making. (C)

Recommendation 4.3.3

All patients with IE managed at referring hospitals who have (or develop) IE ‘red flags’ should be transferred urgently to a heart centre. This transfer should be immediate if the threat is high (eg, heart failure) or within 2 days if the threat is moderate (eg, Staphylococcus aureus infection on a mechanical valve with no dysfunction). (C)

Recommendation 4.3.4

There should be a clear point of contact at each hospital for IE teams to communicate about patients with IE/suspected IE, for example, a dedicated phone line or email address (the latter requiring regular review and response). (C)

Recommendation 4.3.5

There should be a system of alerts in each hospital (based on clinical, microbiological or echocardiographic findings) that triggers referral to the IE team. (B)

Recommendation 4.3.6

An auditable electronic communication system should be in place for the referral of new patients to (and between) IE teams. (C)

Recommendation 4.3.7

Patients with IE who are transferred between hospitals should be accompanied by a standardised form detailing their clinical presentation, medical/cardiac history, medications, allergies, presence of vascular access devices, biochemistry, microbiology (eg, blood culture and susceptibility results) and imaging results, and all recent antibiotic therapy (including start/stop dates, doses, frequency and route of administration). (C)

Patient follow-up and information

Recommendation 4.4.1

Patients being treated for IE should be offered written information about IE. (C)

Recommendation 4.4.2

Patients who are discharged following treatment for an episode of IE should be advised of the risk of relapse and recurrence, how these can be reduced and how to recognise the symptoms of IE. (C)

Recommendation 4.4.3

In addition to usual discharge letters, patients with IE should be advised to inform their general practitioner if they have a persistent non-specific feverish illness, in order to trigger appropriate collection of blood cultures and onward referral. (C)

Recommendation 4.4.4

All patients with IE should be offered follow-up in a valve or general cardiology clinic; patients with ACHD should be followed up in ACHD services. (C)

Governance

Recommendation 4.5.1

Endocarditis teams should have a regular (eg, yearly) review of quality (patient outcomes). (C)

Recommendation 4.5.2

Cases of healthcare-associated endocarditis should be investigated by root cause analysis and linked to existing systems for organisational learning and patient safety. (C)

Evidence review and discussion

IE MDT meeting

Three studies evaluated the impact of introducing an IE MDT meeting using a before-and-after design; all were single centre and at moderate or severe risk of bias, reflecting the challenges of adequately controlling such evaluations.5–7 A further five before-and-after studies (also at serious risk of bias) used multivariable logistic regression, propensity score matching and/or Cox proportional hazard modelling to attempt to account for confounding variables in assessing the effect of an IE MDT on outcomes.8–12 In multivariable analyses, MDT assessment of NVE and PVE was associated with significantly reduced 3-year mortality (NVE: OR 0.71, 95% CI 0.08 to 0.91; and PVE: OR 0.55, 95% CI 0.22 to 0.98)8 10 and reduced in-hospital mortality12 and had no effect on 30-day mortality.11 Three single-centre cohort studies, with serious/critical risk of bias, used multivariable analysis to assess the effect of an MDT on outcomes.11 13 14 One study described a cohort of patients managed by an IE MDT but did not evaluate the service.15 IE MDT meetings occurred ad hoc,11 weekly/biweekly and discussed patients remotely (using video conferencing at one centre).15 Details of the format, structure and mechanisms for implementing and documenting decisions were generally not included, but one study described creation of an information sheet with clinical, microbiological and imaging data for patients with suspected IE in their computerised record, which was then presented at the MDT by the treating physician.15 IE MDTs usually occurred weekly and included infection specialists (microbiology or infectious disease (ID) consultants), cardiologists and cardiac surgeons, and one team also included an IE specialist nurse coordinator.5–7 15 In the before-and-after studies, introduction of IE MDT meetings was associated with significant reduction in the duration of antibiotic therapy,6 inpatient stay,6 7 number of antibiotics prescribed,5 time to targeted antibiotic therapy,7 time to surgery,6 time to first transthoracic7 11 and transoesophageal echocardiogram,11 in-hospital/30-day mortality,5 9 11 16 higher rates of removal of implantable cardiac electronic devices,11 and the incidence of cardiac and extracardiac complications (eg, reduced postoperative stroke and less postoperative haemodialysis).5 9 One study found an increase in the rate of blood culture positivity after introduction of the MDT,5 while others found no difference,6 7 and one analysis showed an increase in the duration of inpatient stay.5 One cohort study found a significant effect of MDT review on mortality using univariate analysis (that did not persist on multivariable analysis),13 and another reported reduced complications, mortality and improved antimicrobial stewardship following introduction of an IE team.5 Finally, the vast majority of respondents in a survey study of medical and surgical specialities agreed that an IE MDT improved diagnostic evaluation, reduced management errors, increased access to surgery and reduced in-hospital mortality.17

One study used a before-and-after design to investigate the impact of a regional IE service involving a telephone consultation service for referring hospitals, criteria for referral and meetings to raise awareness of IE.9 Although there were methodological issues with this study, time between the onset of symptoms to referral or to surgery, and rates of both preoperative stroke and congestive heart failure were significantly lower in the period following introduction of the service.9

We agreed that individuals regularly involved in the care of patients with IE build up valuable clinical experience which impacts positively on patient care, although we found no direct evidence to support this view. There is evidence of clinical experience improving outcomes in other areas. Conversely, inexperience is potentially detrimental to care. Suboptimal care is far more likely to happen when an inexperienced clinician works in isolation to manage a complex clinical problem, and it is this scenario we aim to avoid. There is wide international consensus that MDTs are the right way to deliver care, that is, the best way to ensure patients are appropriately assessed, investigated, managed and referred. A guidance document for the format of cardiac MDTs has been recently published.18

Bedside patient review

One IE team reviewed patients on the wards two times a week with the purpose of establishing or excluding the diagnosis of IE, agreeing on antibiotic therapy, making decisions about surgery and evaluating clinical progress.7 There was significant reduction in both the time to commencing IE-specific antibiotic therapy (4.0±4.0 days vs 2.5±3.2 days, p=0.004) and the time from suspected IE to surgery (7.8±7.3 days vs 5.3±4.2 days, p=0.004). In multivariable analysis, IE team review was associated with reduced risk of mortality (HR 0.24, 95% CI 0.07 to 0.87), but this IE team also carried out MDT meetings in addition to ward review.

IE ‘alerts’

A ‘multidisciplinary alert for endocarditis’ has been described in which comprehensive patient assessment was triggered by physicians appointed to monitor for clinical, microbiological and echocardiographic suspicions of IE.16 This process was associated with a significant reduction in mortality (OR 0.27, 95% CI 0.10 to 0.71), but the study compared outcomes to historical controls, was at high risk of bias and failed to describe the nature of comprehensive patient assessment. Analysis of a period of ID review of all bacteraemic patients compared with a prior period without consultation was associated with increased diagnosis of IE, although this study was at high risk of bias.19 In single-centre cohort studies of patients with S. aureus bacteraemia, ID consultation was associated with higher rates of echocardiography in two studies20 21 and lower mortality rates in one.20 Similarly, in a retrospective cohort study of patients with at least one blood culture positive for Enterococcus spp., patients with an ID consultation were more likely to undergo repeat cultures to ensure clearance (99% vs 74%, p<0.001), echocardiography (79% vs 45%, p<0.001), surgical intervention (20% vs 7%, p=0.01) and receive antibiotics for an appropriate duration (90% vs 46%, p<0.001).22

IE guidelines and protocols

One study evaluated the introduction of a local consensus IE ‘protocol’ that included recommendations for microbiological investigation, antibiotic treatment and surgical intervention.23 In multivariable analysis, mortality was reduced in the period using the protocol when compared with a prior control period (HR 0.26, 95% CI 0.09 to 0.76). Introduction of a hospital-wide protocol for the management of S. aureus bacteraemia was associated with increased rates of echocardiography and IE diagnosis (with no impact on survival), although this study was at serious risk of bias.24

Aim of IE services

In the absence of high-quality evidence, all new recommendations in this section represent Working Party consensus. IE is an uncommon and challenging condition, and management by experienced MDTs is widely considered to be the standard of care. In our opinion, the primary aim of the IE team is to improve patient outcomes with a secondary aim to improve efficiency of care. The need for IE teams in all hospitals is axiomatic, since patients with IE or suspected IE can present to any acute hospital; however, this has not been sufficiently emphasised. The functions and composition of an IE team will vary in different settings (box 1) and may need to be dynamic, allowing individuals to rotate into the role, depending on resources and local staffing arrangements.

Box 1

Functions of the multidisciplinary IE team

All hospitals.

Diagnosis.

  • Use a system of alerts to allow notification of possible IE cases from microbiology and echocardiography laboratories.

  • Receive requests for review of all patients admitted with possible IE.

  • Confirm or reject diagnosis of IE (applying Duke criteria26 as appropriate) to reach a working diagnosis.

  • Investigate for extracardiac secondary infections.

Antibiotic treatment.

  • Formulate an antimicrobial management plan, including antimicrobial agents, dose, frequency, route of administration and duration of therapy (including therapeutic drug monitoring).

  • Monitor for adverse drug reactions and modify therapy as required.

  • Determine suitability for outpatient parenteral antibiotic therapy.

Collaboration.

  • Discuss each case with the appropriate heart centre within 12 hours of diagnosis.

  • Communicate progress with the heart centre at least weekly (or more frequently depending on clinical urgency).

  • Arrange transfer to the heart centre if indicated to improve patient care.

  • Consider investigation of portals of entry (eg, teeth, gut, etc).

  • Discuss treatment of extracardiac infection (eg, splenic or spinal abscess).

Monitor.

  • Ensure that clinical progress is monitored at least daily.

  • Monitor CRP and renal function.

  • Arrange echocardiography if any change in clinical condition (or predischarge if transfer for surgery is not required).

  • Arrange outpatient follow-up after discharge (initially at 1 and 3 months).

Documentation.

  • Document findings from each ward review or MDT meeting in the clinical notes.

  • Provide a comprehensive summary of management for transferred patients.

Patient perspective.

  • Explain the diagnosis of IE to patients, and how it will be managed, and answer their questions.

  • Provide written information for patients about IE and how to reduce the risk of future episodes.

  • Refer to the local drug addiction team (if appropriate).

Heart centre.

MDT.

  • Hold a meeting at least once each week.

  • Provide advice/support/training for IE teams in centres without cardiac surgical facilities.

Further management.

  • Arrange further imaging (including TOE, FDG-PET/CT) if indicated and unavailable at DGH.

  • Discuss with relevant cardiac specialists (eg, cardiologist specialising in lead extraction).

  • Discuss with relevant non-cardiac specialists (eg, neurosurgeon or renal physician).

Cardiac surgery

  • Discuss transfer from referring centre.

  • Monitor clinical progress (including potential indications for cardiac surgery).

  • For patients requiring surgery, determine the most appropriate intervention (and its timing).

  • Assign surgeon with appropriate subspecialist expertise (eg, mitral valve repair, adult congenital heart disease).

  • Monitor progress after surgery.

  • Arrange outpatient follow-up after discharge.

  • CRP, C reactive protein; DGH, district general hospital; FDG-PET, fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography; IE, infective endocarditis; MDT, multidisciplinary team; TOE, transoesophageal echocardiography.

We believe that early diagnosis of IE leads to improved outcomes, but this is likely to be dependent on early initiation of optimal antibiotic therapy and the optimal timing of surgery. Reduction in time to targeted antibiotic therapy and first transthoracic echocardiogram was observed in one MDT evaluation.7 Educational packages to raise awareness of the risk of IE in patients with S. aureus bacteraemia may also help to speed diagnosis.24 One of the factors that is likely to affect outcome positively for many patients is prompt access to cardiac surgery; since this is best assessed in a heart centre, there is a need for clear pathways for consultation and referral between non-surgical and surgical centres, and objective criteria to guide referral or transfer (box 2). Hospitalisation with IE has also been identified as an opportunity to engage PWID25 with drug addiction services and the IE team should support this process.

Box 2

Infective endocarditis service: indications for emergency transfer to (or discussion with) a heart centre.

  • Indications for emergency transfer to a heart centre (ie, ‘red flags’).

  • Prosthetic valve dehiscence.

  • Valve regurgitation (moderate or severe) and heart failure or haemodynamic instability.

  • Large/highly mobile vegetations.

  • Cardiac abscess, fistula and pseudoaneurysm.

  • Indications for non-emergency transfer to a heart centre.

  • Prosthetic valve endocarditis.

  • Failure to respond to antibiotics (persistently positive blood cultures or fever after 7 days days of appropriate therapy).

  • Moderate/severe valve regurgitation (without heart failure or haemodynamic instability).

  • Stroke (or other embolism) and large residual vegetation.

  • Indications for discussion with a heart centre.

  • All other cases.

Information for patients

No studies were identified that evaluated the information required by patients; our recommendations have therefore been developed in consultation with a patient representative.

Training

No studies were identified that addressed postgraduate medical training in IE. Until objective evidence is available to identify a better approach, established IE teams should help to train junior doctors and support the development of new IE teams through collaborative, cross-centre case discussions and regular regional/national educational events including trainees in cardiology, cardiac surgery and infection specialties.

Outpatient follow-up

No studies were identified that assessed requirements for and/or the value of outpatient follow-up after treatment for IE. By consensus, it was agreed that outpatient follow-up was indicated to monitor for relapse or deterioration in valve function and plan surgery for residual valve disease.

IE in children

Children did not explicitly feature in the literature reviewed, and no primary research studies were identified that investigated service delivery for children with IE. Pending more specific data, we feel the principles outlined in these recommendations would apply as much to children as adults.

The Working Party supported setting up of a formal paediatric cardiac IE team and noted that there are already well-established regional networks of local hospitals for paediatric congenital cardiac services led by level 1 or 2 centres that host weekly (at least) paediatric congenital multidisciplinary meetings. Paediatric IE cases are usually discussed in that forum with invited experts such as microbiologists, ID specialists and local paediatricians. Rather than developing a separate structure, it may be preferable to embed the paediatric IE team within that existing structure.

Conclusions

There is clear consensus that MDTs should drive the care of patients with IE, despite a paucity of high-quality evidence to guide these recommendations (with most studies at serious or critical risk of bias). The infrequent nature of IE means that clinical decision making should be guided by clinicians who gain and share their experience of the care of these patients. More evidence is needed to guide the development of optimal models of care delivery, clinical training, patient information and follow-up.

Research recommendations

The lack of high-quality evidence to inform practice around delivery of care for patients with suspected or confirmed IE was striking. The following research questions arise in the wake of this guideline development process.

IE team

What are the clinical and cost benefits of an IE team?

What is the most clinically and cost-effective model of service delivery?

Infrastructure and location of care of the patients with IE

What are the relative benefits and risks of patients with IE being cared for in a local hospital without the facilities of a heart centre on site (eg, availability of transoesophageal echocardiography or cardiac surgical support)?

Patient follow-up

What is the most clinically and cost-effective timing, nature and frequency of follow-up after an episode of IE?

Patient information

What information would patients prefer and how is this best provided?

People who inject drugs

What are the clinical and cost-effective benefits of substance misuse teams to support PWID who also have IE?

IE registry

Would an IE registry improve benchmarking and research?

Can local data be linked to central NHS Digital or other relevant databases to report on patient outcomes?

Children

How are IE services best delivered for children?

Ethics statements

Patient consent for publication

Ethics approval

Not applicable.

Acknowledgments

Gavin Barlow, Bethan Stoddart, and Sarah Kelly were initially members of the Working Party but left due to changes in circumstances. Their input is gratefully acknowledged. We are extremely grateful to Richard Gosling (patient and public representative) for invaluable input and support. We thank Vittoria Lutje for undertaking literature searches and deduplication. Piers Daubeney kindly provided feedback from the British Congenital Cardiac Association, which joined the collaboration after the first draft had been completed.

References

Supplementary materials

  • Supplementary Data

    This web only file has been produced by the BMJ Publishing Group from an electronic file supplied by the author(s) and has not been edited for content.

Footnotes

  • Twitter @j_sandoe, @AntibioticLeeds, @RichardSteeds

  • Contributors JAS lead the project, systematic review, risk of bias assessment, evidence synthesis and drafted the manuscript. FA, PA, AG, BDP, RS, RS, RW, OW, and JBC: systematic review and risk of bias assessment. All authors contributed to the scoping exercise, final analysis and writing of the final manuscript.

  • Competing interests The British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy provided funds for literature search, administrative support and meeting space. JATS (JS) received research funding from the National Institute for Health Research, the Medical Research Council, Welcome Trust, Engineering and Physical Sciences Council, and Jon Moulton Charity Trust. JS received consulting fees from Tillotts Pharma and Medtron. BDP and JBC are on the Editorial Board for BMJ Heart. BDP received consulting fees from Anteris and Microport, honoraria from Medtronic, Abbott, Edwards Lifesciences and Anteris and is on the data safety monitoring committee of Colibri. He is a board member of PCR and has received writing fees from Edwards Lifesciences.

  • Provenance and peer review Commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

  • Supplemental material This content has been supplied by the author(s). It has not been vetted by BMJ Publishing Group Limited (BMJ) and may not have been peer-reviewed. Any opinions or recommendations discussed are solely those of the author(s) and are not endorsed by BMJ. BMJ disclaims all liability and responsibility arising from any reliance placed on the content. Where the content includes any translated material, BMJ does not warrant the accuracy and reliability of the translations (including but not limited to local regulations, clinical guidelines, terminology, drug names and drug dosages), and is not responsible for any error and/or omissions arising from translation and adaptation or otherwise.

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