Clinical meaning
Culture-negative infective endocarditis (CNIE) accounts for 5-31% of all IE cases where standard blood cultures fail to identify the causative organism. The most common cause is prior antibiotic exposure (up to 45% of CNIE cases -- antibiotics suppress bacterial growth in culture media). Other causes include fastidious organisms requiring special growth conditions: HACEK group (Haemophilus, Aggregatibacter, Cardiobacterium, Eikenella, Kingella -- require prolonged incubation), Coxiella burnetii (Q fever -- most common cause of CNIE worldwide, intracellular pathogen), Bartonella species (cat scratch, body lice), Brucella (unpasteurized dairy), Tropheryma whipplei (Whipple disease), and fungi (Candida, Aspergillus -- especially in prosthetic valves and IVDU). Non-infectious causes mimicking IE include Libman-Sacks endocarditis (SLE), marantic endocarditis (malignancy), and antiphospholipid syndrome.
Diagnosis & workup
Diagnostics & workup: - Extended blood culture incubation: hold cultures for 14-21 days to allow growth of HACEK and other slow-growing organisms - Serologic testing: Coxiella burnetii (Q fever) phase I and II IgG antibodies (anti-phase I IgG ≥1:800 is a major Duke criterion); Bartonella IgG antibodies (≥1:800 is a major criterion); Brucella serology; Legionella urinary antigen - PCR testing: 16S rRNA gene PCR on blood, surgically excised valve tissue, or emboli (identifies bacteria by genetic material when cultures are negative) - Echocardiography: TTE first; TEE if TTE negative but clinical suspicion high (TEE sensitivity ~95% for vegetations vs ~65% for TTE) - Duke criteria application: culture-negative IE is challenging because one major criterion (positive blood cultures) is absent; rely more heavily on echocardiographic findings, vascular/immunologic phenomena, and serologic evidence - Autoimmune workup: ANA, antiphospholipid antibodies, complement levels (to exclude non-infectious mimics like Libman-Sacks) - Valve tissue histopathology and culture if surgery performed: provides definitive identification in many CNIE cases