Background: bloodstream infections (BSIs) remains debated, particularly the clinical impact of vancomycin resistance, the role of follow-up cultures, and optimal therapeutic regimens. This study aimed to reach expert consensus on these unresolved clinical domains and identify priorities for future research. Methods: BSIs, and 4) optimal antibiotic therapy for VRE-BSIs. These results informed a three-round Delphi process involving a panel of experts. An iterative approach was adopted: 16 initial questions developed from the systematic review (6-point Likert scale) were refined across rounds based on expert feedback. Consensus was defined as at least 80% agreement or disagreement. Findings: 13 statements were generated across three broader domains. Regarding clinical outcomes and diagnostics, experts agreed that mortality is heavily influenced by comorbidities; thus, therapeutic assessment should rely on clinical trends and inflammatory markers, with follow-up blood cultures used to confirm eradication. Catheter-related BSI should be managed with device removal and short-course (9 mg/kg per day) are effective, reserving daptomycin-based combinations for challenging cases (deep-seated infections and/or high Minimum Inhibitory Concentrations). Finally, future trials evaluating the impact of antimicrobial therapy should use Desirability-of-Outcome-Ranking analysis; the in-vitro potential of oritavancin justifies targeted randomized trials to define its clinical efficacy in VRE-BSI. Interpretation: BSI while identifying crucial knowledge gaps to guide future clinical research. Funding: None.
Rinaldi et al. (Fri,) studied this question.