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BackgroundStaphylococcus aureus bacteremia (SAB) is a clinically heterogeneous disease. The ability to identify subgroups of patients with shared traits (subphenotypes) is an unmet need to allow patient stratification for clinical management and research. We aimed to test the hypothesis that clinically relevant subphenotypes can be reproducibly identified among patients with SAB.MethodsWe studied 3 cohorts of adults with monomicrobial SAB: a UK retrospective observational study (Edinburgh cohort, n = 458), the UK ARREST trial (n = 758), and the Spanish SAFO trial (n = 214). Latent class analysis was used to identify subphenotypes using routinely collected clinical data without considering outcomes. Mortality and microbiologic outcomes were then compared between subphenotypes.ResultsIncluded patients had predominantly methicillin-susceptible SAB (1366 of 1430, 95.5%). We identified 5 distinct, reproducible clinical subphenotypes: (A) SAB associated with older age and comorbidity, (B) nosocomial intravenous catheter-associated SAB in younger people without comorbidity, (C) community-acquired metastatic SAB, (D) SAB associated with chronic kidney disease, and (E) SAB associated with injection drug use. Survival and microbiologic outcomes differed between the subphenotypes. Mortality was highest in subphenotype A and lowest in subphenotypes B and E. Microbiologic outcomes were worse in subphenotype C. In a secondary analysis of the ARREST trial, adjunctive rifampicin was associated with increased mortality in subphenotype B and improved microbiologic outcomes in subphenotype C.ConclusionsWe have identified reproducible and clinically relevant subphenotypes within SAB and provide proof of principle of differential treatment effects. Through clinical trial enrichment and patient stratification, these subphenotypes could contribute to a personalized medicine approach to SAB.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1093/cid/ciae338

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2024-11-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

79

Pages

1153 - 1161

Total pages

8

Addresses

D, e, p, a, r, t, m, e, n, t, , o, f, , I, n, f, e, c, t, i, o, u, s, , D, i, s, e, a, s, e, s, ,, , L, e, i, d, e, n, , U, n, i, v, e, r, s, i, t, y, , M, e, d, i, c, a, l, , C, e, n, t, e, r, ,, , L, e, i, d, e, n, , U, n, i, v, e, r, s, i, t, y, ,, , L, e, i, d, e, n, ,, , T, h, e, , N, e, t, h, e, r, l, a, n, d, s, .

Keywords

Humans, Staphylococcus aureus, Bacteremia, Staphylococcal Infections, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Retrospective Studies, Comorbidity, Phenotype, Adult, Aged, Middle Aged, Female, Male, United Kingdom