Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Association between mortality of Escherichia coli meningitis in young infants and non-virulent clonal groups of strains

2008; Elsevier BV; Volume: 14; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1469-0691.2008.02019.x

ISSN

1469-0691

Autores

Véronique Houdouin, Stéphane Bonacorsi, Philippe Bidet, Jorge Blanco, F. de La Rocque, Robert Cohen, Y. Aujard, Édouard Bingen,

Tópico(s)

Antibiotic Resistance in Bacteria

Resumo

To identify factors associated with Escherichia coli meningitis (ECM) mortality in infants aged <3 months, the clinical, biological and bacterial characteristics of isolates from 99 cases of ECM were compared, including the phylogenetic group, multilocus sequence type, O serogroup and sequence O type (a combination of sequence type complex (STc) and O serogroup) and virulence genotype. All 99 isolates were susceptible to the initial antimicrobial treatment. The mortality rate (14%) was not influenced by term or post-natal age. Hypotension or seizures were the sole clinical predictive factors for fatal outcome (p <0.01), and abnormal initial trans-fontanellar ultrasound was associated with death (p 0.03). Seventy-seven isolates belonged to the common sequence O types (STc29(O1), STc29(O18), STc29(O45), STc301(O7), STc304(O16), STc697(O83), STc700(O1)) causing neonatal meningitis. None of the phylogenetic groups and none of the virulence determinants were distributed differently between survivors and non-survivors, except that the aerobactin gene (iucC) was less frequent in lethal isolates (94% vs. 71%, p 0.02). Isolates belonging to rare sequence O types were more likely to be lethal (OR 4.3, p 0.01), although they induced a lower level of bacteraemia than common sequence O types such as STc29(O18) and STc29(O45) in a neonatal rat model. These results suggest that unidentified human genetic risk-factors may be more important than strain virulence in predicting ECM mortality.

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