Duke Criteria for Infective Endocarditis
Diagnostic criteria for endocarditis.
Check out the updated 2023 Duke-ISCVID criteria here!
Advice
The diagnosis of infective endocarditis must be made as soon as possible to initiate therapy.
“Definite”:
- Start antibiotic treatment based on guidelines and microbiology.
- Identify candidates who need surgical treatment.
“Possible”:
- Use clinical judgment to decide if the patient has IE.
- Consider trans-esophageal echocardiography (TEE), if not done.
- Identify candidates who need surgical treatment.
- Examine the patient regularly to watch for major or minor signs of IE.
- Examine for physical findings suggestive of IE (Roth’s spots, Osler's nodes, Janeway lesions.
- Draw blood cultures regularly if not positive earlier to look for microbiologic evidence.
“Rejected”:
- Consider other causes of fever, like other infectious sources, or rheumatologic or oncologic.
Management
“Definite” IE:
- One or more Pathologic criteria, or
- 2 major criteria, or
- 1 major and 3 minor criteria, or
- 5 minor criteria.
“Possible” IE:
- 1 major criterion and 1 minor criterion, or
- 3 minor criterion.
“Rejected”:
- Firm alternative diagnosis explaining evidence of IE, or
- Resolution of IE symptoms with antibiotics for less than or equal to 4 days, or
- No pathological evidence of IE at surgery or autopsy, with antibiotic therapy < 4 days, or
- Does not meet criteria of “possible”, as above.
Critical Actions
- Prior treatment with even a few days of antibiotics may mask pathological evidence of IE(micro-organisms in the tissue or histological evidence).
- Consider trans-esophageal echocardiography if the clinical suspicion is high and the patient is in the “possible” group.
- Consider IE, if previously not suspected, if persistently positive (2 or more) blood cultures.
- For patients who have subacute IE and are hemodynamically stable, empiric antibiotics can be avoided so that additional blood cultures can be obtained without the confounding effect of empiric treatment.