一名 COVID-19 患者因难以诊断的高粘液性肺炎克雷伯菌 K1-ST82 引起的严重合并感染:病例报告。

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Masamichi Itoga, Wataru Hayashi, Shizuo Kayama, Liansheng Yu, Yo Sugawara, Masahiko Kimura, Hiroyuki Hanada, Sadatomo Tasaka, Motoyuki Sugai
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:冠状病毒病(COVID-19)住院患者合并感染肺炎克雷伯氏菌是一个重大问题,会增加疾病恶化的风险。高病毒性(hv)和高黏液性(hm)肺炎克雷伯菌(Kp)因其可引起侵袭性社区获得性感染而在亚洲备受瞩目。然而,在 COVID-19 的背景下,对 hvKp/hmKp 合并感染的认识仍然有限。我们报告了一例严重的 hmKp 快速进展合并感染病例,该病例在 COVID-19 住院患者中表现出 "难以诊断 "的表型:一名 61 岁的女性 COVID-19 患者最初表现出类似普通感冒的轻微症状。然而,她的病情在 7 天内迅速恶化,并因出现呼吸困难而入院。患者需要补充氧气、抗生素治疗和机械通气。从肺泡灌洗液和血液培养物中分离出了表型不典型的革兰氏阴性菌。这两种菌株在临床相关培养基上形成小而光亮的非乳糖发酵菌落,对氨苄西林敏感。由于脲酶阴性表型,传统的生化检验无法确定肠杆菌属菌株。因此,在进行基质辅助激光解吸电离飞行时间质谱(MALDI-TOF MS)分析之前,肺炎克氏菌的鉴定工作十分困难。阳性串联测试表明菌落具有粘液性,但用于拉伸菌落的材料存在差异。在 MiSeq 和 GridION 平台上进行的全基因组测序显示,血源性菌株 JARB-RN-0063 属于血清型 K1 和序列类型 (ST) 82。与 hvKp 相关的基因 rmpA 和 iroCD 位于 5.0-Mb 的染色体上,iucABCD-iutA 在 217.9-kb 的 IncFIB(K)/IncR 型质粒上被鉴定出来。因此,JARB-RN-0063在遗传学上被归类为hvKp,克雷伯氏毒力评分为3分。由于IS1F元件插入,固有青霉素酶基因blaSHV存在缺陷,导致该菌株对氨苄西林非典型敏感:这是首例严重的 COVID-19 与难以诊断的 K. penummoniae 菌株合并感染的病例。值得注意的是,hmKp K1-ST82 克隆的合并感染表现出非典型表型,包括生长迟缓、非乳糖发酵、尿素酶阴性反应、氨苄西林敏感性和异常粘液粘度,这给临床实验室的诊断带来了挑战,并阻碍了对 hvKp/hmKp 的鉴定。延迟鉴定可能会恶化患者的预后,因此需要提高临床对此类难以诊断克隆的认识,以防止病情恶化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Severe co-infection caused by difficult-to-diagnose hypermucoviscous Klebsiella pneumoniae K1-ST82 in a patient with COVID-19: a case report.

Background: Co-infection with Klebsiella pneumoniae presents a significant concern in hospitalized patients with coronavirus disease (COVID-19), increasing the risk of severe disease progression. Hypervirulent (hv) and hypermucoviscous (hm) K. pneumoniae (Kp) has gained prominence in Asia due to its capacity to cause invasive community-acquired infections. However, recognition of hvKp/hmKp co-infections in the context of COVID-19 remains limited. We report a severe case of rapidly progressing co-infection with hmKp exhibiting "difficult-to-diagnose" phenotypes in a hospitalized patient with COVID-19.

Case presentation: A 61-year-old woman with COVID-19 initially exhibited mild symptoms resembling the common cold. However, her condition rapidly deteriorated over 7 days, leading to hospital admission with the development of dyspnea. The patient required supplemental oxygen, antibiotic treatment, and mechanical ventilation. Gram-negative bacteria with atypical phenotypes were isolated from alveolar lavage fluid and blood cultures. Both strains formed small, glossy, non-lactose-fermenting colonies on clinically relevant media and were susceptible to ampicillin. Conventional biochemical tests failed to identify the Enterobacteriales strains owing to the urease-negative phenotype. Consequently, the identification of K. pneumoniae was difficult until matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) analysis was performed. A positive string test indicated mucoviscosity, but with variability in the material used for stretching colonies. Whole-genome sequencing performed on the MiSeq and GridION platforms revealed the blood-derived strain JARB-RN-0063 as belonging to serotype K1 and sequence type (ST) 82. The hvKp-associated genes rmpA and iroCD were located on a 5.0-Mb chromosome, and iucABCD-iutA was identified on a 217.9-kb IncFIB(K)/IncR-type plasmid. Therefore, JARB-RN-0063 was genetically classified as hvKp with a Kleborate virulence score of 3. The intrinsic penicillinase gene blaSHV was defective owing to an IS1F element insertion, resulting in the strain being atypically susceptible to ampicillin.

Conclusions: This is the first case of severe COVID-19-associated co-infection with a difficult-to-diagnose K. penummoniae strain. Notably, co-infection by the hmKp K1-ST82 clone exhibited atypical phenotypes, including stunted growth, non-lactose fermentation, urease-negative reaction, ampicillin susceptibility, and abnormal mucoviscosity, posing diagnostic challenges for clinical laboratories and impedes the identification of hvKp/hmKp. Delayed identification may worsen patient outcomes, highlighting the need for increased clinical awareness of such difficult-to-diagnose clones to prevent deterioration.

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来源期刊
BMC Infectious Diseases
BMC Infectious Diseases 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
860
审稿时长
3.3 months
期刊介绍: BMC Infectious Diseases is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of the prevention, diagnosis and management of infectious and sexually transmitted diseases in humans, as well as related molecular genetics, pathophysiology, and epidemiology.
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