内容精选

Content Selection

《英国医学杂志》 研究文章

The BMJ Research

Dental procedures, antibiotic prophylaxis, and endocarditis among people with prosthetic heart valves: nationwide population based cohort and a case crossover study [人工心脏瓣膜置换后的牙科手术、抗生素预防治疗和心内膜炎:全国人口队列和病例交叉研究]

  • 分享:

BMJ 2017; 358 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.j3776 (Published 07 September 2017)
Cite this as: BMJ 2017;358:j3776

Authors
Sarah Tubiana, Pierre-Olivier Blotière, Bruno Hoen, Philippe Lesclous, Sarah Millot, Jérémie Rudant, Alain Weill, Joel Coste, François Alla, Xavier Duval

Abstract
Objective To assess the relation between invasive dental procedures and infective endocarditis associated with oral streptococci among people with prosthetic heart valves.

Design Nationwide population based cohort and a case crossover study.

Setting French national health insurance administrative data linked with the national hospital discharge database.

Participants All adults aged more than 18 years, living in France, with medical procedure codes for positioning or replacement of prosthetic heart valves between July 2008 and July 2014.

Main outcome measures Oral streptococcal infective endocarditis was identified using primary discharge diagnosis codes. In the cohort study, Poisson regression models were performed to estimate the rate of oral streptococcal infective endocarditis during the three month period after invasive dental procedures compared with non-exposure periods. In the case crossover study, conditional logistic regression models calculated the odds ratio and 95% confidence intervals comparing exposure to invasive dental procedures during the three month period preceding oral streptococcal infective endocarditis (case period) with three earlier control periods.

Results The cohort included 138 876 adults with prosthetic heart valves (285 034 person years); 69 303 (49.9%) underwent at least one dental procedure. Among the 396 615 dental procedures performed, 103 463 (26.0%) were invasive and therefore presented an indication for antibiotic prophylaxis, which was performed in 52 280 (50.1%). With a median follow-up of 1.7 years, 267 people developed infective endocarditis associated with oral streptococci (incidence rate 93.7 per 100 000 person years, 95% confidence interval 82.4 to 104.9). Compared with non-exposure periods, no statistically significant increased rate of oral streptococcal infective endocarditis was observed during the three months after an invasive dental procedure (relative rate 1.25, 95% confidence interval 0.82 to 1.82; P=0.26) and after an invasive dental procedure without antibiotic prophylaxis (1.57, 0.90 to 2.53; P=0.08). In the case crossover analysis, exposure to invasive dental procedures was more frequent during case periods than during matched control periods (5.1% v 3.2%; odds ratio 1.66, 95% confidence interval 1.05 to 2.63; P=0.03).

Conclusion Invasive dental procedures may contribute to the development of infective endocarditis in adults with prosthetic heart valves.