| Literature DB >> 34068785 |
Gilbert Donders1,2,3, Peter Greenhouse4, Francesca Donders1, Ulrike Engel5, Jorma Paavonen6, Werner Mendling7.
Abstract
There has been an increasing worldwide incidence of invasive group A streptococcal (GAS) disease in pregnancy and in the puerperal period over the past 30 years. Postpartum Group A streptococci infection, and in particular streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (TSS) and necrotizing fasciitis, can be life threatening and difficult to treat. Despite antibiotics and supportive therapy, and in some cases advanced extensive surgery, mortality associated with invasive group A streptococcal postpartum endometritis, necrotizing fasciitis, and toxic shock syndrome remains high, up to 40% of postpartum septic deaths. It now accounts for more than 75,000 deaths worldwide every year. Postpartum women have a 20-fold increased incidence of GAS disease compared to non-pregnant women. Despite the high incidence, many invasive GAS infections are not diagnosed in a timely manner, resulting in potentially preventable maternal and neonatal deaths. In this paper the specific characteristics of GAS infection in the field of Ob/Gyn are brought to our attention, resulting in guidelines to improve our awareness, early recognition and timely treatment of the disease. New European prevalence data of vaginal GAS colonization are presented, alongside two original case histories. Additionally, aerobic vaginitis is proposed as a supplementary risk factor for invasive GAS diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Streptococcus pyogenes; endometritis; invasive GAS infection; maternal mortality; puerperal infection; sepsis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34068785 PMCID: PMC8126195 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10092043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
GAS virulence mechanisms.
| Mechanism of Action of | Meditors and Their Activity |
|---|---|
| Attachment | M protein and lipoteichoic acid: mediating adhesion |
| Pili (encoded by FCT genes (Fibronectin- and collagen binding proteins and T antigen encoding loci): adhesion to epithelial cells by forming biofilms | |
| Fibronectin binding protein (FBPs): extracellular matrix proteins | |
| Serum Opacity Factor (SOF): opacifies serum and binds to fibronectin | |
| Fbp54: mediates binding to specific human cells (e.g., buccal cells) | |
| Steptococal suface deghydrogenase (SDH): binds numerous host proteins such as laminin, plasminogen and fibronectin | |
| Streptococcal collagen-like proteins: mimics human collagen and increases binding to eukaryotic cells | |
| Hyaluronic acid capsule: prevents adherence to eukaryotic host cells | |
| Laminin binding proteins: interacts with SpeB protease to enhance attachment | |
| Streptococcal surface encolase (SEB): plasminogen binding protein | |
| Evasion | Inhibition of host phagocytosis by an outer capsule of hyaluronic acid |
| Streptodornase—a group of DNase enzymes which prevent killing by host neutrophils | |
| C5a peptidase—destroys a host chemotaxin (C5a), which is part of the complement cascade | |
| Streptococcal chemokine protease (ScpC)—an enzyme which degrades IL-8, preventing neutrophil ingress into tissue affected by necrotising fasciitis | |
| Invasion | Exotoxins—Streptolysin S (cardiotoxic), Streptolysin O (haemolytic) and Streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxins (SpeA, SpeB, SpeE) which are responsible for TSLS |
| Streptokinase—a protein (with subtypes SK1, SK2a & SK2b), which converts host plasminogen into plasmin, triggering fibrinolysis and thus tissue destruction |
Abbreviated Adult Case Definition for Streptococcal Toxic Shock Syndrome (CDC 2010).
| Hypotension-Systolic BP <90 mm Hg |
|---|
| Renal impairment: Creatinine >177 µmol/L |
| Coagulopathy: Platelets <100 × 106/L or disseminated intravascular coagulation, defined by prolonged clotting times, low fibrinogen level, and the presence of fibrin degradation products |
| Liver involvement: Double the normal level of alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, or total bilirubin |
| Acute respiratory distress syndrome: defined by acute onset of diffuse pulmonary infiltrates and hypoxemia in the absence of cardiac failure or by evidence of diffuse capillary leak manifested by acute onset of generalized oedema, or pleural or peritoneal effusions with hypoalbuminemia |
| Skin involvement: a generalized erythematous macular rash which may desquamate |
| Soft-tissue necrosis, including necrotizing fasciitis or myositis, or gangrene |
Information on lab-based GAS prevalence in vaginal cultures from European countries provided by ISIDOG members.
| Area/Country | Reporter | Total Number Vaginal Cultures | Vaginal GAS Positive | % GAS Positive |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Switzerland (Basel) | B. Frey | 22,762 | 73 | 0.10% |
| Switzerland (Geneva) | B. Martinez de Tejada | 14,811 | 22 | 0.15% |
| Belgium (Tienen) | G. Donders | 13,552 | 24 | 0.18% |
| Germany (Wupperthal) | W. Mendling | 7767 | 29 | 0.37% |
| Sweden (Lund) | P-G. Larsson | 3838 | 84 | 2.19% * |
| The Netherlands (Alkmaar) | A Adriaanse | 21,995 | 531 | 2.41% * |
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* Samples only collected from symptomatic patients.
Published prevalence of vaginal GAS colonization in asymptomatic pregnant women (panel a) and pregnant women with symptoms of vulvovaginitis (panel b).
| Area/Country |
| Vaginal GAS | Status | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (a) Prevalence in asymptomatic women | ||||
| US Northern New England | 6944 | 0.03% | Normal pregnancy | [ |
| Australia | 1600 | 0.06% | Normal pregnancy | [ |
| UK | 100 | 0% | Normal pregnancy | [ |
| The Netherlands | 505 | 0% | Not pregnant, fertile age | [ |
| (b) Prevalence in symptomatic women | ||||
| The Netherlands | 505 | 4.9% | recurrent vaginal discharge | [ |
| Pakistan | 136 | 1.5% | Vulvovaginitis | [ |
| Australia | 50 | 6% | premenarchal girls > 2 years old with VV symptoms | [ |
| Switzerland | 80 | 21% | prepubertal girls, aged 2–12 years, with vulvovaginitis | [ |
Risk factors of iGAS infection in an obstetrical setting.
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Caesarean section vs. vaginal delivery (Grade 2 b) [ |
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Location where labor and delivery occurred (developing country) (Grade 3a) [ |
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Known GAS carriers (Grade 1b) [ |
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Exposure to GAS carriers (Grade 1b) [ |
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Altered immune status associated with pregnancy (20 × higher risk) (Grade 1b) [ |
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Genetic background of the host (Grade 3a) [ |
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Virulence of the infecting GAS strain (Grade 3a) [ |
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Sore throat or upper respiratory tract infection (Grade 4) [ |
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Retained placental products (Grade 2b) [ |
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Purulent vaginitis (Aerobic Vaginitis) (Grade 5, see above |
Clinical features of iGAS (pre-)sepsis in Ob/Gyn patients [2].
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Fever |
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General myalgia |
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Tender, sub-involuted uterus |
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General malaise |
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Lower abdominal pain |
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Diarrhoea |
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Purulent and foul smelling lochia |
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Abnormal vaginal bleeding |
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Features of severe sepsis: hypothermia, tachypnoea, neutropenia |
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Signs of shock such as hypotension, and sustained tachycardia (sometimes absent) |
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Infection of other organs: wound infection (episiotomy, caesarian scar), mastitis, urinary tract infection, pneumonia, gastroenteritis, pharyngitis |
Figure 1Bedside fresh wet mount microscopy of S. viridians in vaginal fluid. The differential between other streptococci cannot be made on this picture alone, but in a very sick post-op or postpartum patient it is a rapid clue to suspect streptococcal or staphylococcal sepsis and a hint to undertake further sepsis workup and start timely antibiotic coverage. Small arrows: chains of cocci. Normal arrows: leukocytes indicating inflammatory response.