Respiratory infection by Corynebacterium striatum: epidemiological and clinical determinants

The increasing prevalence of advanced chronic respiratory disease, with frequent exposure to broad-spectrum antibiotics for repeated and prolonged hospitalizations, favours the emergence of nosocomial respiratory infection by Gram-positive bacteria, such as outbreaks of Corynebacterium striatum. The...

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Main Authors: F. Renom, M. Gomila, M. Garau, M.d.C. Gallegos, D. Guerrero, J. Lalucat, J.B. Soriano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2014-07-01
Series:New Microbes and New Infections
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2052297514500182
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author F. Renom
M. Gomila
M. Garau
M.d.C. Gallegos
D. Guerrero
J. Lalucat
J.B. Soriano
author_facet F. Renom
M. Gomila
M. Garau
M.d.C. Gallegos
D. Guerrero
J. Lalucat
J.B. Soriano
author_sort F. Renom
collection DOAJ
description The increasing prevalence of advanced chronic respiratory disease, with frequent exposure to broad-spectrum antibiotics for repeated and prolonged hospitalizations, favours the emergence of nosocomial respiratory infection by Gram-positive bacteria, such as outbreaks of Corynebacterium striatum. There is little evidence about patterns of respiratory infection, transmission and adaptive ability of this pathogen. Seventy-two C. striatum isolates from 51 advanced respiratory patients, mainly chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, were studied during 38 months. Patients were 74.8 ± 8.6 years old and 81.9% were men, who had required an average of 2.2 hospitalizations and 63.5 days in the hospital in the previous year. Of 49 isolates from 42 patients we were able to identify 12 clones by multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA), nine phenotypic variants and 22 antibiotic susceptibility patterns, and we determined their clinical and epidemiological determinants. MLSA allows identification of the existence of nosocomial outbreaks by transmission of the same or different clones, the persistence of the same clone in the environment or in patient airways for months. The study showed the high variability and adaptive capacity of the isolates, the antibiotic multidrug-resistance in all of them, and their contribution to a high morbidity and mortality (41%) during the study period.
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spelling doaj.art-fe835188c1c84878abe1bb1a6d4450cc2022-12-21T22:31:52ZengElsevierNew Microbes and New Infections2052-29752014-07-012410611410.1002/nmi2.48Respiratory infection by Corynebacterium striatum: epidemiological and clinical determinantsF. Renom0M. Gomila1M. Garau2M.d.C. Gallegos3D. Guerrero4J. Lalucat5J.B. Soriano6Respiratory Department, Hospital Joan March, BunyolaMicrobiologia, Departament de Biologia, Universitat de les Illes Balears, Institut Mediterrani d’Estudis Avançats (CSIC-UIB), Palma de MallorcaMicrobiology Service, Hospital Son Llàtzer, Palma de MallorcaMicrobiology Service, Hospital Son Llàtzer, Palma de MallorcaProgramme of Epidemiology and Clinical Research, Fundació Caubet-CIMERA Illes Balears, International Centre for Advanced Respiratory Medicine, Bunyola, Balearic Islands, SpainMicrobiologia, Departament de Biologia, Universitat de les Illes Balears, Institut Mediterrani d’Estudis Avançats (CSIC-UIB), Palma de MallorcaProgramme of Epidemiology and Clinical Research, Fundació Caubet-CIMERA Illes Balears, International Centre for Advanced Respiratory Medicine, Bunyola, Balearic Islands, SpainThe increasing prevalence of advanced chronic respiratory disease, with frequent exposure to broad-spectrum antibiotics for repeated and prolonged hospitalizations, favours the emergence of nosocomial respiratory infection by Gram-positive bacteria, such as outbreaks of Corynebacterium striatum. There is little evidence about patterns of respiratory infection, transmission and adaptive ability of this pathogen. Seventy-two C. striatum isolates from 51 advanced respiratory patients, mainly chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, were studied during 38 months. Patients were 74.8 ± 8.6 years old and 81.9% were men, who had required an average of 2.2 hospitalizations and 63.5 days in the hospital in the previous year. Of 49 isolates from 42 patients we were able to identify 12 clones by multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA), nine phenotypic variants and 22 antibiotic susceptibility patterns, and we determined their clinical and epidemiological determinants. MLSA allows identification of the existence of nosocomial outbreaks by transmission of the same or different clones, the persistence of the same clone in the environment or in patient airways for months. The study showed the high variability and adaptive capacity of the isolates, the antibiotic multidrug-resistance in all of them, and their contribution to a high morbidity and mortality (41%) during the study period.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2052297514500182Advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary diseaseCorynebacterium striatumepidemiologygenotypemultidrug-resistancerespiratory infection
spellingShingle F. Renom
M. Gomila
M. Garau
M.d.C. Gallegos
D. Guerrero
J. Lalucat
J.B. Soriano
Respiratory infection by Corynebacterium striatum: epidemiological and clinical determinants
New Microbes and New Infections
Advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Corynebacterium striatum
epidemiology
genotype
multidrug-resistance
respiratory infection
title Respiratory infection by Corynebacterium striatum: epidemiological and clinical determinants
title_full Respiratory infection by Corynebacterium striatum: epidemiological and clinical determinants
title_fullStr Respiratory infection by Corynebacterium striatum: epidemiological and clinical determinants
title_full_unstemmed Respiratory infection by Corynebacterium striatum: epidemiological and clinical determinants
title_short Respiratory infection by Corynebacterium striatum: epidemiological and clinical determinants
title_sort respiratory infection by corynebacterium striatum epidemiological and clinical determinants
topic Advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Corynebacterium striatum
epidemiology
genotype
multidrug-resistance
respiratory infection
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2052297514500182
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AT mgomila respiratoryinfectionbycorynebacteriumstriatumepidemiologicalandclinicaldeterminants
AT mgarau respiratoryinfectionbycorynebacteriumstriatumepidemiologicalandclinicaldeterminants
AT mdcgallegos respiratoryinfectionbycorynebacteriumstriatumepidemiologicalandclinicaldeterminants
AT dguerrero respiratoryinfectionbycorynebacteriumstriatumepidemiologicalandclinicaldeterminants
AT jlalucat respiratoryinfectionbycorynebacteriumstriatumepidemiologicalandclinicaldeterminants
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