| Literature DB >> 22300510 |
Paul N Goldwater1, Karl A Bettelheim.
Abstract
Verotoxigenic Escherichia coli (VTEC) are a specialized group of E. coli that can cause severe colonic disease and renal failure. Their pathogenicity derives from virulence factors that enable the bacteria to colonize the colon and deliver extremely powerful toxins known as verotoxins (VT) or Shiga toxins (Stx) to the systemic circulation. The recent devastating E. coli O104:H4 epidemic in Europe has shown how helpless medical professionals are in terms of offering effective therapies. By examining the sources and distribution of these bacteria, and how they cause disease, we will be in a better position to prevent and treat the inevitable future cases of sporadic disease and victims of common source outbreaks. Due to the complexity of pathogenesis, it is likely a multitargeted approach is warranted. Developments in terms of these treatments are discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22300510 PMCID: PMC3286370 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-10-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Approach to management: summarizing trialed and experimental treatments.
| Problem | Treatment | Detail and comments | refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fluid and electrolyte imbalance | Intravenous fluids | Fluid balance and attention to the volume and sodium content of intravenous fluids administered early in the disease have been shown to reduce the risk of developing oligoanuric HUS after | [ |
| Intravenous fluids within first 4 days of onset of diarrhea (isotonic preferable). | [ | ||
| Acute renal failure | Acute renal replacement therapy | Peritoneal dialysis (safe with thrombocytopenia) Hemodialysis | [ |
| Apheresis | Uncertain benefit | [ | |
| Antihypertensives | Where indicated | [ | |
| Hematological: hemolytic anemia | Transfusion (packed red cells) | [ | |
| Hematological: thrombocytopenia | Platelet transfusion (usually avoided) | [ | |
| Preventing further effects of toxin | Antibiotics | Generally to be avoided because of VT/Stx/endotoxin release from dying/dead bacteria. β-lactams to be avoided. | [ |
| The quinolone ciprofloxacin but not fosfomycin causes Shiga toxin-encoding bacteriophage induction and enhanced Stx production from | [ | ||
| Fosfomycin showed evidence of better outcomes in a | [ | ||
| Fosfomycin benefit in humans remains in doubt. The validity of the study has been questioned on the basis that the meta-analysis mischaracterized fosfomycin as being superior to no antibiotics. | [ | ||
| Lumenal toxin neutralisers: Synthetic ligand mimics | Synsorb K; trial showed no benefit | [ | |
| Modified bacteria decorated with Gb3 or Gb4 Super Twig (Gb3 polymer) | Not yet trialed | [ | |
| Antibodies: Monoclonal against A subunit | Protective in lethally-challenged animals | [ | |
| Oral bovine colostrum | No effect on complications; decreases stool frequency but not STEC carriage | [ | |
| LPS antibodies | Reduces | [ | |
| Receptor blockers and toxin intracellular transport inhibitors | Ac-PPP-tet blocks intracellular transport of Stx2 from Golgi to endoplasmic reticulum (essential for Stx2 toxicity) | [ | |
| Systemic (intravenous) toxin binders | [ | ||
| Cell-permeable peptide binds to Stx2 and prevents acute kidney injury. Increases survival in juvenile baboon model. TVP (5 mg/kg) delivered intravenously and simultaneously with toxin or at 6 or 24 h after toxin with daily 1 mg/kg supplements up to day 4 prevented acute kidney injury and | [ | ||
| delayed and reduced blood urea and creatinine levels and increased survival. Delayed administration of the peptide significantly reduced thrombocytopenia, but had no effect on anemia. This cell-permeable agent shows promise in counteracting Stx2 lethality in a baboon model; outcomes of human trials are awaited. | [ | ||
| Blockers of endosome-to-Golgi trafficking of Stx | Recently it was shown that the metal manganese (Mn2+) blocks endosome-to-Golgi trafficking of STx and causes its degradation in lysosomes. Mn2+ targets the cycling Golgi protein GPP130. Direct trafficking of STx from early endosomes to the Golgi, (bypassing late endosomes and lysosomes), is a crucial step that allows STx to avoid degradation. Mn2+, as a small-molecule | [ | |
| Blockers of bacterial and host cell interaction | Probiotics | Harmless recombinant bacteria expressing surface molecules that mimic host cell receptors, deceiving pathogen into attaching to probiotic cell rather than the host cell receptor. Unlikely to benefit symptomatic patients but could be beneficial as prophylactic for family and close contact/exposed persons. Supernatant of cultures of | [ |
| Terminal complement complex formation | Eculizumab (intravenous) | This monoclonal antibody blocks activation of complement and Factor H binding via alternative pathway. | [ |
| Promising results in small clinical pilot study. The antibody was given intravenously at 7 day intervals, twice in two patients and four times in a third patient. | [ | ||
| Immunoprophylaxis | Vaccines | Promising results in animal studies using: | |
| (1) virulence proteins (Stx1/2, intimin, EspA; | [ | ||
| fusion proteins of A and B Stx subunits); | [ | ||
| (2) avirulent ghost cells of EHEC O157:H7; | [ | ||
| (3) live attenuated bacteria expressing | [ | ||
| (4) recombinant fimbrial proteins have been developed in a quest to protect against the STEC-related entity piglet edema disease. Early results are mixed. | [ | ||
| Tir, EspB, EspD, NleA, and EspA were highly immunogenic in vaccinated and naturally infected subjects and represent future candidates for a STEC vaccine; | [ | ||
| (5) DNA vaccines: EHEC Stx2 A2 and B subunits confer immunity in a mouse model; | [ | ||
| (6) plant-based oral recombinant Stx2 vaccine protects mice. | [ | ||
EHEC = enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli; EspA/B/D = E. coli secreted protein A/B/D; Gb3 = globotriaosylceramide; Gb4 = globotetraosylceramide; HUS = hemolytic uremic syndrome; LPS = lipopolysaccharide; NleA = non-LEE-encoded effector A; STEC = Shiga-toxigenic Escherichia coli; Stx = Shiga toxin; Tir = translocated intimin receptor; VT = verotoxin.