Inthanomchanh Vongphoumy1, David A B Dance2, Sabine Dittrich2, Julie Logan3, Viengmon Davong4, Sayaphet Rattanavong4, Joerg Blessmann5. 1. Provincial Health Department, Savannakhet, Lao People's Democratic Republic. 2. Lao-Oxford-Mahosot Hospital Wellcome Trust Research Unit, Microbiology Laboratory, Mahosot Hospital, Vientiane, Lao People's Democratic Republic; Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, England, United Kingdom. 3. Molecular Identification Services Unit, Public Health England, London, United Kingdom. 4. Lao-Oxford-Mahosot Hospital Wellcome Trust Research Unit, Microbiology Laboratory, Mahosot Hospital, Vientiane, Lao People's Democratic Republic. 5. Provincial Health Department, Savannakhet, Lao People's Democratic Republic; Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine, Hamburg, Germany.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mycetoma is a neglected, chronic, localized, progressively destructive, granulomatous infection caused either by fungi (eumycetoma) or by aerobic actinomycetes (actinomycetoma). It is characterized by a triad of painless subcutaneous mass, multiple sinuses and discharge containing grains. Mycetoma commonly affects young men aged between 20 and 40 years with low socioeconomic status, particularly farmers and herdsmen. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: A 30 year-old male farmer from an ethnic minority in Phin District, Savannakhet Province, Lao PDR (Laos) developed a painless swelling with multiple draining sinuses of his right foot over a period of approximately 3 years. X-ray of the right foot showed osteolysis of tarsals and metatarsals. Aerobic culture of sinus discharge yielded large numbers of Staphylococcus aureus and a slow growing Gram-positive rod. The organism was subsequently identified as Nocardia aobensis by 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing. The patient received antimicrobial treatment with amikacin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole according to consensus treatment guidelines. Although slight improvement was noted the patient left the hospital after 14 days and did not take any more antibiotics. Over the following 22 weeks the swelling of his foot subsequently diminished together with healing of discharging sinuses. CONCLUSION: This is the first published case of Actinomycetoma caused by Nocardia aobensis and the second case of Actinomycetoma from Laos. A treatment course of only 14 days with amikacin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole was apparently sufficient to cure the infection, although long-term treatment up to one year is currently recommended. Treatment trials or prospective descriptions of outcome for actinomycetoma should investigate treatment efficacy for the different members of Actinomycetales, particularly Nocardia spp., with short-term and long-term treatment courses.
BACKGROUND:Mycetoma is a neglected, chronic, localized, progressively destructive, granulomatous infection caused either by fungi (eumycetoma) or by aerobic actinomycetes (actinomycetoma). It is characterized by a triad of painless subcutaneous mass, multiple sinuses and discharge containing grains. Mycetoma commonly affects young men aged between 20 and 40 years with low socioeconomic status, particularly farmers and herdsmen. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: A 30 year-old male farmer from an ethnic minority in Phin District, Savannakhet Province, Lao PDR (Laos) developed a painless swelling with multiple draining sinuses of his right foot over a period of approximately 3 years. X-ray of the right foot showed osteolysis of tarsals and metatarsals. Aerobic culture of sinus discharge yielded large numbers of Staphylococcus aureus and a slow growing Gram-positive rod. The organism was subsequently identified as Nocardia aobensis by 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing. The patient received antimicrobial treatment with amikacin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole according to consensus treatment guidelines. Although slight improvement was noted the patient left the hospital after 14 days and did not take any more antibiotics. Over the following 22 weeks the swelling of his foot subsequently diminished together with healing of discharging sinuses. CONCLUSION: This is the first published case of Actinomycetoma caused by Nocardia aobensis and the second case of Actinomycetoma from Laos. A treatment course of only 14 days with amikacin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole was apparently sufficient to cure the infection, although long-term treatment up to one year is currently recommended. Treatment trials or prospective descriptions of outcome for actinomycetoma should investigate treatment efficacy for the different members of Actinomycetales, particularly Nocardia spp., with short-term and long-term treatment courses.
Mycetoma is a chronic, localized, progressively destructive, granulomatous infection caused either by fungi (eumycetoma) or by aerobic actinomycetes (actinomycetoma). The disease was added to the WHO list of neglected diseases and conditions in 2013 [1]. It is most likely acquired by traumatic inoculation of the causative organism into the subcutaneous tissue, usually of the foot although any part of the body can be affected. Mycetoma is characterized by a triad of painless subcutaneous mass, multiple sinuses and discharge containing grains [2]. It commonly affects young adults, particularly males aged between 20 and 40 years. The male/female ratio is approximately 3:1. People of low socioeconomic status and manual workers such as farmers, labourers and herdsmen are most frequently affected [3,4]. Consensus treatment guidelines for eumycetoma and actinomycetoma recommend long-term treatment over 6–12 months with antifungal or antibacterial drugs [5]. However no comparative clinical trials of treatment of this condition have ever been undertaken. It is possible that the taxonomically diverse range of causative agents of eumycetoma and actinomycetoma may require more differentiated therapeutic regimens. Here we report a case of actinomycetoma caused by Nocardia aobensis, which was cured after short-term antibiotic treatment.
Materials and Methods
Ethics statement
Written informed consent was obtained from the patient for publication of this case report and any accompanying images. The board of directors of Lao-Oxford-Mahosot Hospital Wellcome Trust Research Unit, Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine and Savannakhet provincial hospital approved this case report for publication.
Medical history
A 30 year-old male farmer from an ethnic minority group in Phin District, Savannakhet Province, Lao PDR, reported the development of a painless swelling of his right foot over approximately 3 years. He had no history of trauma or animal bites. Multiple draining sinuses developed over time discharging serous fluid.
Clinical examination
The patient was afebrile with normal vital signs and physical examination was unremarkable except for a massive tumour-like lesion of the right foot with multiple sinuses on the dorsal and plantar surfaces (Fig 1A, 1B, and 1C).
Fig 1
Pictures A, B and C show the right foot before treatment, Pictures D, E and F show the foot 22 weeks after treatment.
X-ray of the right foot before treatment showed osteolysis of tarsals and metatarsal, particularly metatarsals II–V, the cuneiforms and cuboid and a pathologic fracture at the base of metatarsal V. (Fig 2A).
Fig 2
X-ray of right foot before (A) and 10 months after treatment (B).
X-ray of the right foot 10 months after treatment
X-ray of the right foot 10 months after treatment showed significant improvement at the metatarsal shafts II–V with healing of the fracture at metatarsal V, but still osteolysis at metatarsal bases II–V, the cuneiforms and cuboid. Joint lines between metatarsals and tarsals are not identifiable (Fig 2B).
Microbiological and molecular biological results
Aerobic culture of sinus discharge yielded large numbers of Staphylococcus aureus and a slow growing Gram-positive rod, which was apparent after 5 days’ incubation (Fig 3B). Gram stain preparation showed branching Gram-positive rods (Fig 3A). The organism was identified as Nocardia aobensis in two independent laboratories after amplification and sequencing of the 16S ribosomal RNA gene (839bp: coverage 839/839, identity 100%, e-value 0.00, Accession Number KP250991; 670bp [hypervariable regions V3–V7]: coverage 670/670, identity 100%, e-value 0.00, Accession Number KP404096) and blast analysis against the NCBI database [6].
Fig 3
(A) Gram stain preparation showing branching Gram-positive rods, (B) Chocolate agar showing heavy growth of Staphylococcus aureus with scattered colonies of Nocardia aobensis (5 days’ incubation).
Clinical diagnosis
Mycetoma
Microbiological diagnosis
Actinomycetoma caused by Nocardia aobensis
Treatment
The patient received amikacin (15mg/kg/day) intravenously combined with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) (7/35 mg/kg/day) per os for 14 days. Although slight improvement was noted at that stage, with a decrease of discharge and closure of sinuses, the patient left the hospital against medical advice for traditional treatment in his village and did not take any more antibiotics (Fig 4). Over the following weeks the swelling of his foot subsequently diminished together with healing of discharging sinuses. This was confirmed when he was seen 22 and 43 weeks after antibiotic treatment at the health centre in his village and the provincial hospital (Fig 1D, 1E, and 1F). He resumed physical work in the forest without limitation and reported a significant overall improvement of his state of health. X-ray of his right foot showed significant improvement at the metatarsal shafts, but still signs of osteolysis at the metatarsal bases, the cuneiforms and cuboid. The initial anaemia and thrombocythaemia, most likely the result of chronic infection, returned to normal 10 months after treatment.
Fig 4
Right foot after 14 days of treatment with amikacin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.
Sinuses were closed and no more discharge observed.
Right foot after 14 days of treatment with amikacin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole.
Sinuses were closed and no more discharge observed.
Discussion
The incidence of mycetoma in Laos is not known. Only one case of actinomycetoma, caused by Actinomadura madurae, from Xieng Khouang province in the northern part of the country has been published [7].The patient’s history and the clinical appearance of his foot were suggestive of mycetoma and microbiological culture and molecular biological identification of Nocardia aobensis confirmed the diagnosis of actinomycetoma. Correct identification of the causative agent is crucial in order to choose the appropriate treatment.More than 30 species have so far been identified as aetiological agents of mycetoma worldwide [8]. Actinomadura madurae, Actinomadura pelletieri, Nocardia brasiliensis, Nocardia asteroides and Streptomyces somaliensis are most frequently responsible for causing actinomycetoma [4]. The patient described is to our knowledge the first confirmed case of actinomycetoma caused by Nocardia aobensis and adds one more causative agent to the list. Nocardia aobensis was first described in 2004 after having been isolated from sputum of Japanese patients [9]. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing has not been done for the isolate described here, but most Nocardia spp. including Nocardia aobensis, are susceptible to amikacin and TMP-SMX [10].In 1987, Welsh et al. reported a study which included 15 patients treated for actinomycetoma, all but one of which were caused by Nocardia brasiliensis, with cycles of amikacin alone (2 cases) and amikacin with TMP-SMX (13 cases). Treatment with amikacin 15mg/kg/day for 3 weeks together with TMP-SMX 7/35mg/kg/day for 5 weeks was defined as 1 cycle. The patients were all cured after 1–3 cycles, with 4 patients cured after 1 cycle, 8 patients cured after 2 cycles and 3 patients cured after 3 cycles [11,12]. In 1982 a young man with severe actinomycetoma and pulmonary involvement caused by Nocardia brasiliensis was successfully treated with one cycle [13]. Based on their experience with 56 patients Welsh et al. recommend 1–4 cycles with amikacin and TMP-SMX in severe cases of actinomycetoma that do not respond to TMP-SMX alone, achieving a cure rate of approximately 90% [5]. The number of cycles is dependent on the clinical and bacteriological response and varies from case to case. In our patient, a clinical improvement with closure of sinuses was noted after only two weeks of amikacin and TMP-SMX (Fig 4). Swelling was still significant at that time and took 22 weeks to resolve, which under normal circumstances might have misled the clinician in charge to continue the treatment for a longer period, although it appears that cure had already been achieved after 2 weeks. Current practice may thus entail some “overkill”. However, although haemoglobin and platelet count returned to normal values 43 weeks after treatment, radiological changes of metatarsal and tarsal bones had not completely disappeared at that time and this requires further follow up, because recurrence 2 years after remission has been previously reported [5].Clinical trials or prospective descriptions with short-term and long-term antimicrobial treatment courses and longer periods of follow up are needed to inform optimal antibiotics and particularly treatment duration. Actinomycetoma affects mostly poor villagers in remote communities and shorter treatment courses would significantly reduce the financial burden and side effects of amikacin and TMP-SMX.
Conclusion
To our knowledge this is the first published patient with actinomycetoma caused by Nocardia aobensis and the second case of actinomycetoma from Laos. A treatment course of only 14 days with amikacin and TMP-SMX appears to have been sufficient to cure the infection as defined by 43 weeks follow up. Trials or prospective descriptions of efficacy of different antimicrobial therapy with short-term and long-term treatment courses for actinomycetoma should investigate treatment outcome separately for different members of Actinomycetales, particularly Nocardia spp.
Gene Bank accession number 1 for nucleotide sequence.
(DOCX)Click here for additional data file.
Gene Bank accession number 2 for nucleotide sequence.
Authors: Abdalla O A Ahmed; Willem van Leeuwen; Ahmed Fahal; Wendy van de Sande; Henri Verbrugh; Alex van Belkum Journal: Lancet Infect Dis Date: 2004-09 Impact factor: 25.071