| Literature DB >> 31127850 |
Gilles Nevez1,2, Thibaud Guillaud-Saumur1,2, Pierrick Cros3, Nicolas Papon1, Sophie Vallet4,5, Dorothée Quinio1,2, Adissa Minoui-Tran4, Léa Pilorgé4, Loïc de Parscau3, Jacques Sizun3, Theresa J Ochoa6, Beatriz Bustamante6, Carolina Ponce7, Sergio L Vargas7, Solène Le Gal1,2.
Abstract
Data on features of Pneumocystis primary infection in infancy are still fragmented. To study Pneumocystis primary infection, 192 infants who were monitored for acute pulmonary disease or fever over a 40-month period were retrospectively investigated. P. jirovecii detection on archival nasopharyngeal aspirates was performed using a qPCR assay. Factors associated with P. jirovecii were assessed using univariate and multivariate analyses. P. jirovecii genotypes in infants and a control group of adults contemporaneously diagnosed with Pneumocystis pneumonia were identified using unilocus, bilocus, and multilocus sequence typing (MLST). P. jirovecii was detected in 35 infants (18.2%). The univariate analysis pointed out four factors: viral infection (P = .035, OR [IC 95], 2.2 [1.1-4.7]), lower respiratory tract infection (P = .032, OR [IC 95], 2.5 [1.1-5.9]), absence of hospital discharge after birth (P = .003, OR (IC 95), 0.1 (0.02-0.5]), and the 63-189-day group (P < .001, OR [IC 95], 42.2 [5.4-332]). The multivariate analysis confirmed these two latter factors (P = .02, OR [IC 95], 0.1 [0.02-0.72]; P = .005, OR [IC 95], 11.5 [2.1-63.5]). Thus, P. jirovecii acquisition mostly takes place in the community. A comparison of these data with those of previously published studies showed that median and interquartile range of positive-infant ages were close to those observed in Chile, Denmark, and Peru, highlighting similar characteristics. Common unilocus or bilocus genotypes were identified in infants and adults, whereas no MLST genotypes were shared. Therefore, a common reservoir made up of infected infants and adults is still hypothetical. Finally, primary infection is a worldwide phenomenon occurring at the same time in childhood regardless of geographical location, rather than an incidental event.Entities:
Keywords: MLST; Pneumocystis jirovecii; genotypes; infants; primary infection
Year: 2020 PMID: 31127850 PMCID: PMC7107579 DOI: 10.1093/mmy/myz040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Mycol ISSN: 1369-3786 Impact factor: 4.076
Pneumocystis jirovecii detection on nasopharyngeal aspirate samples in non-immunosuppressed infants at risk for Pneumocystis primary infection: results and infants’ characteristics.
| No. of positive infants ( | No. of negative infants ( |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 21/14 | 100/57 | .70 (κ2 test) | |
|
| 114 (75–173) | 44 (22–192) |
| |
|
| Term birth | 25 (71.4%) | 84 (53.5%) | .068 (Fisher exact test) |
| Moderate to late preterm[ | 7 (20%) | 25 (15.9%) | ||
| Very preterm[ | 1 (2.9%) | 25 (15.9%) | ||
| Extremely preterm[ | 2 (5.7%) | 21 (13.4%) | ||
|
| Congenital diseasesb | 12 (34.3%) | 24 (15.3%) |
|
| Hyaline membrane disease and/or bronchopulmonary dysplasia | 4 (11.4%) | 52 (33.1%) | ||
| Cystic fibrosis | 0 | 1 (0.6%) | ||
| Absence of underlying diseases | 19 (54.3%) | 85 (54.1%) | ||
|
| No | 2 (5.7%) | 55 (35. %) |
|
| Yes | 33 (94.3%) | 100 (63.7%) | ||
| Unknown data | 0 | 2 (1.3%) | ||
|
| Upper respiratory tract infection | 4 (11.4%) | 15 (9.6%) | .079 (Fisher exact test) |
| Lower respiratory tract infection | 22 (62.9%) | 68 (43.3%) | ||
| Absence of respiratory symptoms[ | 9 (25.7%) | 70 (44.6%) | ||
| Unknown data | 0 | 4 (2.5) | ||
|
| Virus[ | 21 (60%) | 63 (40.1%) | .06 (κ2 test) |
| Bacteria[ | 7 (20%) | 22 (14%) | ||
| Absence | 11 (31.4%) | 82 (52.2%) |
IQR, interquartile range; F, female; M, male
a P. jirovecii was detected in 10 preterm infants (weeks of amenorrhea, a1 32 -35, a2 28–32, a3 < 28);
bIntrauterine growth restriction (17), unlabeled malformation syndrome (11), Tetralogy of Fallot (3), CHARGE syndrome (coloboma, heart defect, atresia choanae, retarded growth and development, genital hypoplasia, ear anomalies/deafness) (2), Pierre Robin syndrome (2), spinal muscular atrophy (1), central hypoventilation syndrome (1), VACTERL association (1), Down syndrome (1), unbalanced t(8, 20) (1), Menkes disease (1).
c P. jirovecii was detected in only 2 out of 57 infants who had been hospitalized since birth whereas it was mostly detected in infants who were discharged after birth (33 out of the 133 infants); indeed, some newborns and infants were hospitalized after birth and discharge of their mothers;
dInfants who presented fever in absence of overt respiratory symptoms,
e P. jirovecii was detected in a context of co-infections with viruses and/or bacteria in 28 infants whereas it was detected alone in 11 infants.
fRhinovirus, Respiratory Syncytial Virus, Parainfluenza 3 virus, Metapneumovirus, Influenza A virus, Influenza B virus, Enterovirus, Coronavirus, Cytomegalovirus, Adenovirus, Bocavirus, Parechovirus.
g Branhamella catarrhalis, Bordetella pertussis, Haemophilus influenza, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus haemolyticus, Enterobacter cloacae, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella oxytoca, Klebsiella pneumoniae
Univariate and multivariate analysis of factors associated with Pneumocystis jirovecii detection in non-immunosuppressed infants at risk for Pneumocystis primary infection.
| Variable | Adjusted odds ratio | 95% CI |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Univariate analysis | |||
| Age quartile | |||
| no. 3 ( | 42.2 | 5.4-332 | <.001 |
| no. 4 ( | 9.6 | 1.15-80 | .037 |
| 90 ≤ age <120 days | 51 | 1.7-1498 | .023 |
| Hyaline membrane disease and/or bronchopulmonary dysplasia[ | 0.3 | 0.1-0.8 | .019 |
| Congenital disease | 2.4 | 1.1-5.6 | .037 |
| Viral coinfection | 2.2 | 1.1-4.7 | .035 |
| Lower respiratory tract infection | 2.5 | 1.1-5.9 | .032 |
| Absence of hospital discharge after birth[ | 0.1 | 0.02-0.5 | .003 |
| Multivariate analysis | |||
| Age quartile no. 3 ( | 11.5 | 2.1-63.5 | .005 |
| Absence of hospital discharge after birth[ | 0.1 | 0.02-0.72 | .02 |
CI, confidence interval.
anegatively associated with P. jirovecii; bsome newborns and infants were hospitalized after birth and discharge of their mothers.
Results of Pneumocystis jirovecii genotyping at three loci in non-immunosuppressed infants developing primary Pneumocystis primary infection.
| MLST genotype | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bilocus genotype | ||||
| Infant Code | Sample code | MtLSU alleles | CYB alleles | SOD alleles |
| E007 | E007-2[ | mtLSU2, mtLSU4 | Allele mix[ | SOD2 |
| E007-3 | mtLSU2, mtLSU3, mtLSU4 | Allele mix[ | Allele mix[ | |
| E008 | E008-1 | ...[ | CYB3 | ...[ |
| E017 | E017-1 | ...[ | CYB1 | SOD1 |
| E029 | E029-3 | mtLSU4 | CYB2 | SOD2 |
| E032 | E032-1 | ...[ | CYB1 | ...[ |
| E044 | E044-1[ | ...[ | CYB1 | Allele mix[ |
| E044-2 | mtLSU2 | CYB1 | ...[ | |
| E069 | E069-1 | Allele mix[ | Allele mix[ | SOD1 |
| E075 | E075-1 | mtLSU2 | ...[ | ...[ |
| E076 | E076-1 | mtLSU2 | CYB1 | Allele mix[ |
| E082 | E082-1 | ...[ | CYB6 | SOD2 |
| E089 | E089-1 | mtLSU3 | CYB1 | SOD2 |
| E103 | E103-1[ | mtLSU2, mtLSU4 | CYB6 | ...[ |
| E103-2 | mtLSU2 | CYB1, CYB6 | SOD2 | |
| E114 | E114-1 | mtLSU4 | CYB5 | SOD1 |
| E125 | E125-1 | mtLSU3 | ...[ | ...[ |
| E130 | E130-1 | mtLSU3 | CYB2 | Allele mix[ |
| E138 | E138-1 | mtLSU3 | CYB5 | Allele mix[ |
| E143 | E143-2 | mtLSU2 | ...[ | ...[ |
| E154 | E154-1 | ...[ | CYB1, CYB6 | ...[ |
| E156 | E156-1 | mtLSU2 | CYB2 | SOD2 |
| E159 | E159-1 | mtLSU2 | ...[ | ...[ |
| E165 | E165-1 | mtLSU2, mtLSU3 | CYB1 | Allele mix[ |
| E169 | E169-1 | mtLSU2 | CYB2 | ...[ |
| E171 | E171-1 | ...[ | CYB1 | ...[ |
| E177 | E177-1 | mtLSU2 | CYB1 | ...[ |
| E190 | E190-1 | mtLSU3 | CYB1 | ...[ |
| E206 | E206-1 | mtLSU3, mtLSU4 | CYB1 | SOD2 |
The alleles were identified considering changes at nucleotide positions described elsewhere by Beard et al.23, Esteves et al.16, and Maitte et al.17.
CYB, cytochrome b gene; mtLSU, mitochondrial large subunit ribosomal RNA gene; SOD, superoxide dismutase gene.
aThe infants underwent nasopharyngeal aspirates two times, only one sample was considered for statistical analysis.
b“…”, typing failure.
cAllele mix, presence of several different alleles that were not identified.
Results of Pneumocystis jirovecii genotyping at three loci in immunosuppressed adults developing Pneumocystis pneumonia.
| MLST genotype | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Bilocus genotype | |||
| Adult and sample code | MtLSU alleles | CYB alleles | SOD alleles |
| A001 | mtLSU2 | CYB2 | SOD1 |
| A002 | mtLSU4 | CYB1 | SOD1 |
| A003 | mtLSU1 | CYB5, CYB8 | SOD2 |
| A004 | mtLSU1 | CYB2 | SOD2 |
| A005 | mtLSU1, mtLSU4 | CYB2 | SOD1 |
| A006 | mtLSU1 | CYB8 | SOD2 |
| A007 | mtLSU2 | Allele mix[ | Allele mix[ |
| A008 | mtLSU2 | CYB8 | SOD1 |
| A009 | mtLSU2 | CYB1, CYB7 | Allele mix[ |
| A010 | mtLSU3 | CYB1 | SOD1 |
| A011 | mtLSU4 | CYB1 | SOD1 |
| A012 | mtLSU4 | CYB2 | SOD1 |
| A013 | Allele mix[ | CYB1, CYB2 | SOD2 |
| A014 | mtLSU1 | CYB1 | Allele mix[ |
| A015 | mtLSU3 | CYB6 | SOD1 |
| A016 | Allele mix[ | CYB1, CYB6 | SOD2 |
| A017 | mtLSU3, mtLSU1 | CYB1 | SOD1, SOD4 |
| A018 | mtLSU2 | CYB1 | Allele mix[ |
| A019 | mtLSU2 | CYB2 | Allele mix[ |
| A020 | mtLSU1, mtLSU3 | CYB1 | SOD1 |
| A021 | mtLSU3 | CYB5 | SOD1 |
The alleles were identified considering changes at nucleotide positions described elsewhere by Beard et al.23, Esteves et al.16, and Maitte et al.17. Multilocus genotypes are named following the pattern [x-y] (two-loci genotypes) or [x-y-z] (three-loci genotypes) where x = mtLSU allele number, y = CYB allele number and z = SOD allele number.
CYB, cytochrome b gene; MLST, multilocus sequence typing; mtLSU, mitochondrial large subunit ribosomal RNA gene; N/A, not applicable; SOD, superoxide dismutase gene.
Not typed: Typing failure due to amplification and/or sequencing and/or sequence analysis issues.
Undetermined mix: Detection of several undetermined alleles or multilocus genotypes in the same sample.
aallele mix, presence of several different alleles that were not identified.
Figure 1.Boxplots of age distribution of infants positive for Pneumocystis jirovecii in Chile, Peru, Denmark, and France (two geographical locations). Lines within each box represent the median values. Ends of whiskers mark the lowest and highest diversity values in each instance. aOchoa TJ, Bustamante B, Garcia C al., manuscript in preparation.
Figure 2.Prevalence of Pneumocystis jirovecii in non-immunosuppressed infants at risk for Pneumocystis primary infection in Chile, Peru, Denmark, and France (two geographical locations). aOchoa TJ, Bustamante B, Garcia C al., manuscript in preparation. Foot notes. The analysis pointed out significant differences of prevalence (P < .001, κ2 test) with a higher prevalence in South America than in Europe.