Journal of Community Hospital Internal Medicine Perspectives (Jan 2020)

Conquering the pneumococcal nemesis with oral antibiotics

  • Rana Garris,
  • Rushdy Abanoub,
  • Firas Qaqa,
  • Chirag Rana,
  • Nirmal Guragai,
  • Habib A. Habib,
  • Fayez Shamoon,
  • Mahesh Bikkina

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/20009666.2019.1708637
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 65 – 68

Abstract

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Introduction Streptococcus pneumoniae endocarditis (SPE) occurs in <3% of all EI cases due to the evolution of penicillin and vaccination. However, immunocompromised and unvaccinated patients are still at grave risk. Case A 58-year-old African American male who used alcohol and intravenous (IV) drugs presented with confusion, fever, and hemoptysis. He had coarse rhonchi with a grade 2/5 holosystolic apical murmur. CT chest showed diffuse bilateral infiltrates. Blood cultures were positive for pansensitive Streptococcus pneumoniae. Echocardiogram demonstrated large vegetations on the anterior and posterior leaflets of the mitral valve with flail leaflet and severe eccentric mitral regurgitation. Patient was started on IV ceftriaxone, but after 3 weeks of therapy, he wished to leave against medical advice. He was discharged on combination oral therapy with successful resolution of SPE on follow-up. Discussion Invasive pneumococcus is highly virulent causing irreversible valvular destruction or death. IV beta-lactams are first-line treatment, but there are currently no guideline-recommended alternatives for oral therapy. Recent data suggest partial oral therapy may be noninferior to IV only therapy. Conclusion Switching to oral combination antibiotics after at least 2 weeks of IV therapy is an acceptable alternative to treat SPE.

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