%0 Journal Article %A Pericas, Juan M %A Llopis, Jaume %A Muñoz, Patricia %A Galvez-Acebal, Juan %A Kestler, Martha %A Valerio, Maricela %A Hernandez-Meneses, Marta %A Goenaga, Miguel A %A Cobo-Belaustegui, Manuel %A Montejo, Miguel %A Ojeda-Burgos, Guillermo %A Sousa-Regueiro, M Dolores %A de Alarcon, Aristides %A Ramos-Martinez, Antonio %A Miro, Jose M %T A Contemporary Picture of Enterococcal Endocarditis. %D 2020 %U http://hdl.handle.net/10668/15062 %X Enterococcal endocarditis (EE) is a growing entity in Western countries. However, quality data from large studies is lacking. The purpose of this study was to describe the characteristics and analyze the prognostic factors of EE in the GAMES cohort. This was a post hoc analysis of a prospectively collected cohort of patients from 35 Spanish centers from 2008 to 2016. Characteristics and outcomes of 516 cases of EE were compared with those of 3,308 cases of nonenterococcal endocarditis (NEE). Logistic regression and Cox proportional hazards regression analysis were performed to investigate risk factors for in-hospital and 1-year mortality, as well as relapses. Patients with EE were significantly older; more frequently presented chronic lung disease, chronic heart failure, prior endocarditis, and degenerative valve disease; and had higher median age-adjusted Charlson score. EE more frequently involved the aortic valve and prosthesis (64.3% vs. 46.7%; p  Besides other baseline and clinical differences, EE more frequently affects prosthetic valves and less frequently pacemakers/defibrillators. EE presents higher rates of relapse than NEE. %K enterococci %K epidemiology %K heart failure %K infective endocarditis %K prosthetic valves %K relapses %~