Kytococcus schroeteri endocarditis.To the Editor: Becker et al. recently reported the probable implication of Kytococcus schroeteri in a case of acute prosthetic valve endocarditis prosthetic valve endocarditis, n See endocarditis, infective. , on the basis of its recovery from blood cultures drawn at the time of infection (1). K. schroeteri was only characterized on that occasion and is a new micrococcal mi·cro·coc·cus n. pl. mi·cro·coc·ci A spherical, aerobic, gram-positive bacterium of the genus Micrococcus, usually occurring in irregular clusters. species resistant to penicillins (2). Here, we report the isolation of this organism from prosthetic valve vegetations in a patient who had undergone aortic valve replacement 3 years earlier. The 73-year-old man was admitted with fever (38.8[degrees]C) and shortness of breath Shortness of Breath Definition Shortness of breath, or dyspnea, is a feeling of difficult or labored breathing that is out of proportion to the patient's level of physical activity. , which had both increased gradually over the previous 2 months. He had no recent history of intravenous drug administration or catheterization catheterization Threading of a flexible tube (catheter) through a channel in the body to inject drugs or a contrast medium, measure and record flow and pressures, inspect structures, take samples, diagnose disorders, or clear blockages. . Laboratory findings showed a leukocyte count of 12 x [10.sup.9]/L (90% neutrophils) and a raised C-reactive protein level. Transesophageal echocardiogram ech·o·car·di·o·gram n. A visual record produced by echocardiography. Echocardiogram A non-invasive ultrasound test that shows an image of the inside of the heart. revealed several small vegetations on the Carpentier-Edwards aortic bioprosthesis and a voluminous perivalvular abscess. Four sets of blood cultures were drawn before antimicrobial therapy was initiated. Intravenous vancomycin (2 g twice a day) and gentamicin (240 mg/d) were started empirically. The prosthetic material was replaced promptly and the abscess was debrided extensively. Vegetations from the resected material showed numerous polymorphonuclear polymorphonuclear /poly·mor·pho·nu·cle·ar/ (-noo´kle-er) having a nucleus so deeply lobed or so divided as to appear to be multiple. pol·y·mor·pho·nu·cle·ar adj. Having a lobed nucleus. neutrophils and gram-positive cocci cocci /coc·ci/ (kok´si) plural of coccus. cocci [L.] plural of coccus. on microscopic examination. Oral rifampicin (600 mg twice a day) was added to the initial regimen. The postoperative course was uneventful except for cutaneous intolerance to vancomycin, which was replaced with teicoplanin. The physical condition of the patient improved steadily. Gentamicin and rifampicin were discontinued after 3 weeks. Eight months after completion of the 6-week treatment, the patient had no clinical or biologic evidence of infection, although moderate aortic incompetence persisted. All blood cultures drawn on admission grew gram-positive cocci after 72 hours and subcultures on Trypticase soy agar yielded convex, muddy-yellow colonies of heterogeneous sizes. The vegetations, pus samples of the abscess, and prosthetic valve cultures grew the same type of colonies. All isolates displayed identical biotype biotype /bio·type/ (bi´o-tip) 1. a group of individuals having the same genotype. 2. any of a number of strains of a species of microorganisms having differentiable physiologic characteristics. and antimicrobial susceptibility and were considered as a single strain. The causative organism (designated ROG140) was initially identified as Micrococcus micrococcus Any of the spherical bacteria that make up the genus Micrococcus. Widespread in nature, these gram-positive (see gram stain) cocci (see coccus) are usually not considered to cause disease. sp. based on the morphologic features, resistance to nitrofurantoin nitrofurantoin /ni·tro·fu·ran·to·in/ (-fu-ran´to-in) an antibacterial effective against many gram-negative and gram-positive organisms; used in urinary tract infections. ni·tro·fur·an·to·in n. , and inability to grow anaerobically. Assignment to the genus Kytococcus was suggested by the arginine arginine (är`jənĭn), organic compound, one of the 20 amino acids commonly found in animal proteins. Only the l-stereoisomer participates in the biosynthesis of proteins. dihydrolase activity and resistance to oxacillin oxacillin /ox·a·cil·lin/ (ok?sah-sil´in) a semisynthetic penicillinase-resistant penicillin used as the sodium salt in infections due to penicillin-resistant, gram-positive organisms. , 2 characteristics that are not shared by other micrococci micrococci any bacteria belonging to the family Micrococcaceae. (3). The definitive K. schroeteri identification was provided by analysis of the fatty acid content, which was similar to that of the type strain (2), and sequencing of the 16S rRNA genes. We sequenced a 1,012-bp fragment encompassing the first two thirds of the 16S rDNA of ROG140 (accession no. AY692224). The sequence was compared with those of type strains of all members of the former genus Micrococcus, and a phylogenetic tree was deduced by the neighbor-joining method (Figure). The sequences of ROG140 and the K. schroeteri type strain only differ by an A-to-G substitution at position 747 (E. coli numbering). Among the 21 nucleotide differences between the sequences of K. schroeteri and the closely related species K. sedentarius, 10 are located on a 30-base stretch and constitute a convenient K. schroeteri signature (Figure) Antimicrobial susceptibility testing performed with the disk diffusion method and Etests (AB Biodisk, Solna, Sweden) indicated that the isolate was resistant to penicillins, cephalosporins, kanamycin kanamycin /kan·a·my·cin/ (kan?ah-mi´sin) an aminoglycoside antibiotic derived from Streptomyces kanamyceticus, effective against aerobic gram-negative bacilli and some gram-positive bacteria, including mycobacteria; used as the , tobramycin, erythromycin, clindamycin, sulfonamides Sulfonamides Definition Sulfonamides are medicines that prevent the growth of bacteria in the body. Purpose Sulfonamides are used to treat many kinds of infections caused by bacteria and certain other microorganisms. , and fusidic acid, but susceptible to imipenem (MIC, 0.25 [micro]g/mL), gentamicin (MIC, 1 [micro]g/mL), trimethoprim (MIC, 0.25 [micro]g/mL), tetracycline (MIC, 0.12 [micro]g/mL), linezolid (MIC, 0.25 [micro]g/mL), vancomycin (MIC, 0.125 [micro]g/mL), teicoplanin (MIC, 0.06 [micro]g/mL), and rifampicin (MIC, <0.002 [micro]g/mL). Unlike the original isolate reported by Becker et al. (1), isolate ROG140 was resistant to ofloxacin and ciprofloxacin (MICs, 8 [micro]g/mL). Conversely, moxifloxacin displayed excellent in vitro activity (MIC, 0.05 [micro]g/mL). As moxifloxacin was more rapidly microbicidal than vancomycin in an animal model of Staphylococcus aureus prosthetic valve endocarditis (4), it might present a potential advantage against infections caused by K. schroeteri, especially when the oral route is favored. The natural habitat of K. schroeteri remains unknown. The only isolates of K. schroeteri identified so far originated from blood or cardiac material, although Kytococcus literally means "a coccus coccus Spherical bacterium. Many species have characteristic arrangements that are useful in identification. Pairs of cocci are called diplococci; rows or chains, streptococci (see streptococcus); grapelike clusters, staphylococci (see from the skin." Our attempts to recover K. schroeteri from the mouth, nose, or skin of our patient were unsuccessful. In a recent study, Szczerba et al. were able to isolate most micrococcal species, including K. sedentarius but not K. schroeteri, from human skin and mucosa (5). However, at that time the authors may not have been aware of this newly described species. The mode of contamination also remains unclear. In the original description (1), K. schroeteri endocarditis endocarditis (ĕn'dōkärdī`tĭs), bacterial or fungal infection of the endocardium (inner lining of the heart) that can be either acute or subacute. had developed in the patient <3 months after she underwent cardiac surgery, which suggested perioperative contamination. Here, we describe a late onset, subacute infection 3 years after surgery, which is more likely to have been caused by hematogenous hematogenous /he·ma·tog·e·nous/ (he?mah-toj´e-nus) 1. produced by or derived from the blood. 2. disseminated through the blood stream. he·ma·tog·e·nous adj. 1. spread. Although Micrococcus-like organisms cause endocarditis infrequently (6), the description of 2 independent infections due to a new species in a short period is intriguing and suggests a specific pathogenicity, at least on prosthetic heart devices. By demonstrating the presence of the bacteria in the infected site, this report establishes K. schroeteri as a genuine pathogen in this clinical setting and should prompt further investigations to identify its natural habitat and virulence determinants. At present, commercial systems are not able to identify K. schroeteri. However, gram-positive cocci that are strictly aerobic, oxacillin-resistant, and arginine dihydrolase-positive should be recognized as potential Kytococcus species and taken into account when endocarditis is suspected. Cecile Le Brun, * Julien Bouet, * Philippe Gautier, * Jean-Loup Avril, * and Olivier Gaillot * * Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Rennes, Rennes, France References (1.) Becker K, Wullenweber J, Odenthal HJ, Moeller M, Schumann P, Peters G, et al. Prosthetic valve endocarditis due to Kytococcus schroeteri. Emerg Infect Dis 2003;9:1493-4. (2.) Becker K, Schumann P, Wullenweber J, Schulte M, Weil HP, Stackebrandt E, et al. Kytococcus schroeteri sp. nov., a novel gram-positive actinobacterium isolated from a human clinical source. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 2002;52:1609-14. (3.) Stackebrandt E, Koch C, Gvozdiak O, Schumann P. Taxonomic dissection of the genus Micrococcus: Kocuria gen. nov., Nesterenkonia gen. nov., Kytococcus gen. nov., Dermacoccus gen. nov., and Micrococcus Cohn 1872 gen. emend, Int J Syst Bacteriol 1995;45:682-92. (4.) Entenza JM, Que YA, Vouillamoz J, Glauser MP, Moreillon P. Efficacies of moxifloxacin, ciprofloxacin, and vancomycin against experimental endocarditis due to methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus Methicillin-aminoglycoside resistant Staphylococcus aureus, MRSA An organism with multiple antibiotic resistances–eg, aminoglycosides, chloramphenicol, clindamycin, erythromycin, rifampin, tetracycline, expressing various degrees of ciprofloxacin resistance. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2001;45:3076-83. (5.) Szczerba I, Krzeminski Z. Occurrence and number of bacteria from the Micrococcus, Kocuria, Nesterenkonia, Kytococcus and Dermacoccus genera on skin and mucous membranes in humans. Med Dosw Mikrobiol 2002;55:67-74. (6.) Seifert H, Kaltheuner M, Perdreau-Remington F. Micrococcus luteus endocarditis: case report and review of the literature. Zentralbl Bakteriol 1995;282:431-5. Address for correspondence: Olivier Gaillot, Laboratoire de Bacteriologie-Virologie, Faculte de Medecine-Universite de Rennes 1, 35033 Rennes, France; fax: + 33 2 99 28 41 59; email: Olivier.Gaillot@univ-rennes1.fr |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion