| Literature DB >> 25657301 |
Tadashi Hoshino1, Yushi Hachisu2, Takashi Kikuchi2, Shoko Tokutake1, Hideyuki Okui1, Satoru Kutsuna1, Chie Fukasawa1, Kei Murayama3, Asami Oohara4, Hiroyuki Shimizu4, Midori Ito5, Yoshiko Takahashi6, Naruhiko Ishiwada7.
Abstract
In Japan, publicly subsidized Haemophilus influenzae serotype b vaccines became available in 2011; consequently, the incidence of invasive H. influenzae infection in paediatric patients of less than 5 years of age decreased dramatically. In 2013, the first case of H. influenzae serotype f (Hif) meningitis in a Japanese infant was reported, and another case of Hif meningitis in a Japanese infant was observed in 2013. We experienced a fatal paediatric case of Hif bacteraemia in 2004; therefore, we conducted an analysis of the three Hif strains isolated from these three Japanese children with invasive Hif infections. All three strains were β-lactamase-non-producing, ampicillin-sensitive strains, with MICs of 1 µg ml(-1) or less. However, one of the three strains showed slightly elevated MICs for ampicillin (1 µg ml(-1)), cefotaxime (0.25 µg ml(-1)) and meropenem (0.13 µg ml(-1)). A molecular analysis by multilocus sequence typing identified all three strains as sequence type (ST) 124, which is a predominant invasive Hif strain in many countries. SmaI-digested PFGE showed variable DNA fragmentation patterns among the strains, suggesting that some highly virulent strains have originated from a single ST124 clone and caused invasive Hif infections in Japan. Additional studies are needed to determine the factors that have led to the clonal expansion of virulent ST124 strains.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25657301 DOI: 10.1099/jmm.0.000031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Microbiol ISSN: 0022-2615 Impact factor: 2.472