| Literature DB >> 21888790 |
Fadi Al Akhrass1, Ray Hachem, Jamal A Mohamed, Jeffrey Tarrand, Dimitrios P Kontoyiannis, Jyotsna Chandra, Mahmoud Ghannoum, Souha Haydoura, Ann Marie Chaftari, Issam Raad.
Abstract
Central venous catheters, often needed by cancer patients, can be the source of Nocardia bacteremia. We evaluated the clinical characteristics and outcomes of 17 cancer patients with Nocardia bacteremia. For 10 patients, the bacteremia was associated with the catheter; for the other 7, it was a disseminated infection. N. nova complex was the leading cause of bacteremia. Nocardia promoted heavy biofilm formation on the surface of central venous catheter segments tested in an in vitro biofilm model. Trimethoprim- and minocycline-based lock solutions had potent in vitro activity against biofilm growth. Patients with Nocardia central venous catheter-associated bloodstream infections responded well to catheter removal and antimicrobial drug therapy, whereas those with disseminated bacteremia had poor prognoses.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21888790 PMCID: PMC3322064 DOI: 10.3201/eid1709.101810
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Characteristics and outcomes of 17 cancer patients with Nocardia bacteremia, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, January 1998–March 2010*
*CLABSI, central line–associated bloodstream infection. Patient median age (range) for those with disseminated infection 56 y (32–73 y), for those with CLABSI 44 y (11–77 y); p = 0.31. Median hospital stay (range) for those with disseminated infection 24 d (8–53 d), for those with CLABSI 5 d (2–18 d); p = 0.01. Median antimicrobial drug treatment duration (range) for those with disseminated infection 50 d (21–105 d), for those with CLABSI 82 d (14–120 d); p = 0.56. †Species were not determined for 2 isolates.
Diagnostic and microbiologic profile for 10 cases of Nocardia CLABSI, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, January 1998–March 2010*
| CLABSI case no. | Diagnostic criteria | CRBSI |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Differential quantitative blood culture (CVC | Definite |
| 2 | Positive peripheral blood culture with positive semi-quantitative catheter tip culture (>15 CFU/tip) | Definite |
| 3 | Differential quantitative blood culture (CVC | Definite |
| 4 | CVC blood culture positive with positive semiquantitative catheter tip culture (>15 CFU/tip) | Definite |
| 5 | Differential quantitative blood culture (CVC | Definite |
| 6 | Positive peripheral and CVC blood cultures with positive quantitative catheter tip culture (4,000 CFU/tip) | Definite |
| 7 | Differential quantitative blood culture (CVC | Definite |
| 8 | Positive peripheral and CVC blood culture but negative catheter tip culture | Probable |
| 9 | Positive peripheral and CVC blood culture but negative catheter tip culture | Probable |
| 10 | Positive CVC and peripheral blood culture but negative catheter tip culture | Probable |
*CLABSI, central line–associated bloodstream infection; CRBSI, catheter-related bloodstream infection, defined according to Infectious Disease Society of America guidelines (); CVC, central venous catheter; peri, peripheral. CVC values indicate blood for culture collected from CVC; peri values indicate blood for culture collected from peripheral vessel.
Figure 1Nocardia nova and N. puris quantitative biofilm formation, as assessed by biofilm colonization model. Nocardia spp. isolates adhered to polyurethane (A) and silicone (B) central venous catheter segments with extensive biofilms. CLABSI, central line–associated bloodstream infection.
Figure 2Antibiofilm agents inhibition of biomass of Nocardia nova complex biofilms. N. nova complex biofilms were grown for 24 h on silicone disks, placed in 24-well tissue culture plates, and exposed to trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (Bacterim) and heparin; trimethoprim, EDTA, and ethanol (EtOH); minocycline, EDTA, and ethanol; or Mueller-Hinton broth medium (control) for 2 h. Minocycline and trimethoprim-based lock solutions completely inhibited the N. nova complex biofilm biomass compared with controls (p = 0.003).
Figure 3A) Confocal scanning laser microscopy image of central venous catheter tip in a patient with Nocardia nova complex central line–associated bloodstream infection. Bright green objects are viable biofilm bacteria, and orange-red objects are dead bacteria. Original magnification ×25. B) Scanning electron microscopy image of central venous catheter tip reveals biofilm surface structure. Original magnification ×5,000.
Figure 4Scanning electron microscopy of Nocardia spp. biofilm on silicone central venous catheters. A) N. nova complex (disseminated Nocardia bacteremia) on the surface, showing heavy biofilm matrix covering filamentous cells. B) N. nova complex (definite central line–associated bloodstream infection) showing network of filamentous (thin arrow), partially covered with opaque biofilm matrix (thick arrows). Original magnifications ×2,500.