Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent clinical trial evidence supports broader use of partial oral therapy (POT) for infective endocarditis (IE), yet real-world uptake in the U.S. has not been investigated. METHODS: Adult infectious diseases (ID) physician members of the Infectious Diseases Society of America Emerging Infections Network were surveyed in April-May 2025. A 10-item instrument captured frequency of POT, organism-specific influence, decision factors, barriers, and facilitators. RESULTS: Among 1531 members, 516 (34%) responded; 452 (88%) of them managed IE. POT was uncommon: 16% never used, 53% used in ≤10% of cases, and only 10% used in >25% of patients. Frequent POT rose with caseload (23% in physicians treating >50 IE cases year vs ≤9% in lower-volume groups, P < .001) and with fewer years in clinical practice (13% in <5 yrs vs 5% in ≥25 yrs, P = .013). Comfort with POT depended on the pathogen: 66% were comfortable switching for Streptococcus spp., 52% for Gram-negative bacilli, 19% for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Three quarters of those who used POT finished with a single agent. In people who inject drugs, 34% of physicians often or always considered an oral regimen. Availability of an active oral agent (75%) and the pathogen involved (69%) were the leading decision drivers; principal barriers were fear of relapse (72%), adherence concerns (53%), and insufficient evidence (48%). Respondents most desired clearer guidelines (75%) and additional data (71%). CONCLUSIONS: U.S. adult ID physicians adopt POT for IE sparingly. Updated IE treatment guidelines, additional clinical trial data, and broader access to complex outpatient antimicrobial therapy services may facilitate wider adoption.