Publication | Open Access
Waterborne<i>Elizabethkingia meningoseptica</i>in Adult Critical Care1
82
Citations
26
References
2015
Year
Elizabethkingia MeningosepticaBacterial PathogensMedical MicrobiologyCritical Care MedicinePathogen TransmissionClinical EpidemiologyEmerging Infectious DiseaseInfection ControlPublic HealthInfectious Disease EpidemiologyPathogen PrevalenceE. Meningoseptica AcquisitionLymphatic FilariasisWaterborne DiseasesAdult Critical Care1Clinical MicrobiologyEpidemiologyMolecular Diagnostic TechniquesMicrobial DiseaseEmerging Infectious DiseasesRespiratory TractPathogenesisMicrobiologyMedicineDiagnostic Microbiology
Elizabethkingia meningoseptica is an infrequent colonizer of the respiratory tract; its pathogenicity is uncertain. In the context of a 22-month outbreak of E. meningoseptica acquisition affecting 30 patients in a London, UK, critical care unit (3% attack rate) we derived a measure of attributable morbidity and determined whether E. meningoseptica is an emerging nosocomial pathogen. We found monomicrobial E. meningoseptica acquisition (n = 13) to have an attributable morbidity rate of 54% (systemic inflammatory response syndrome ≥2, rising C-reactive protein, new radiographic changes), suggesting that E. meningoseptica is a pathogen. Epidemiologic and molecular evidence showed acquisition was water-source-associated in critical care but identified numerous other E. meningoseptica strains, indicating more widespread distribution than previously considered. Analysis of changes in gram-negative speciation rates across a wider London hospital network suggests this outbreak, and possibly other recently reported outbreaks, might reflect improved diagnostics and that E. meningoseptica thus is a pseudo-emerging pathogen.
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